I’ve experienced both ends of this. First attempt on Nostr, if you can even call it that, was pathetically short lived and just came to experiment and passively consume content like I did on Twitter. It didn’t work and I quickly left.
But coming around the second time motivated by a much deeper dedication to contributing to freedom technologies and protocols in whatever way I can, it is a completely different experience.
One forced habit that I’ve committed to but found so unnatural is to “post content” or try to “build a following.” Even typing those words felt gross. I think many of us who are on here naturally feel that way.
But once you start to experience the positive feedback loops from the effort you put in in terms of both deep connections with substantive people and a much more creative, attentive posture towards the world, the controlled networks become less and less appealing.
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When you come with something to give, you're not just an audience anymore.
I'm still feeling it out too. But it's fun.
My experience has been almost identical.
First time was passive and short-lived.
Then I got far enough down the Bitcoin and individual sovereignty rabbit hole that all the normies in my life would just stare back at me blankly anytime I passionately talked about these things.
That gets super lonely and makes you start to feel crazy.
Coming back to Nostr the second time has been extremely rich and fulfilling. And definitely permanent.
Man does this resonate! When it really clicked it became impossible for me to shut up about. But I’ve been surprised too how little interest there is when I try to describe it to people. I gotta continually refine how I present it because I’m only becoming more convinced of how important this is