What Martin Luther taught me about Hive

in #hivelast year

Martin Luther taught me how to Hive

...but I didn't even realize it until now.

A comment to a newcomer

I just wrote comment in answer to a new Hiver's inquiry. @ninong7 was asking about how to get going here on Hive. My top suggestion for a newcomer was (likely unsurprisingly to those who've been around here) to engage with others.

If you're reading this, maybe give @ninong7 a look-see, an upvote, or a follow? 🙂

In less than a week it'll be 6 years for me on Hive, and I mentioned that it took me 3 years to figure out that "engage with others" is the main cog that turns the other gears here. "Birthdays" and milestones, and posts like the one I responded to, make me step back and reassess things. Similar to New Year's Eve, where we simultaneously look back and peer forward, reflection is likely the case for most folks at those times. Now, the post I was replying to got me thinking back.

I considered my Hive experience. For the first 3 years, I was expert at posting and walking away. Hive was a great place to log my thoughts, words, and images. If a personal journal was all that was desired (and it kind of was for me then), it worked great. However, if I wanted an upvote here or there, if I wanted maybe some feedback or interaction, or, dare I say, if I wanted to earn some money, that was not there. I was on my own digital island. If I earned a nickel, literally if I earned $0.05, I was thrilled. (Of course, after anything web2, earning a nickel is amazing!)

Martin Luther

After sending the comment, as I went for my first cup of coffee, I considered my advice that I'd just given. Really, I don't like giving advice...it's just not...me. Instead, I prefer to just share my story, my experiences, and maybe that'll help. "Will what I wrote help?", I wondered. "Did I steer in the correct heading?"

My title references Martin Luther. The crux of my advice was, "Engage. I didn't for three years, then started to and then things picked up." Because of the way I think, I wanted an analogy, a mental-picture to pin in my chipmunk brain so it might stick. The imagery of a a corkboard on the wall came to mind. In the digital world I don't see them as much, but the old cork bulletin boards came to mind where you literally pin a note or image onto a wall. (Funny how the terms "bulletin board" and "my wall" have changed due to technology.)

Essentially, that's what I was doing in my first three Hive years...pinning a note on a bulletin board and leaving it there. I could always come back to that board on the wall (my Hive blog) and see it, but, it was just sitting there unchanged. Again, such a pinning has its purpose! Hive is a great, great journaling tool.

But, then, upon my first sip of coffee, the more accurate mental image came to mind: Martin Luther pinning his Ninety-Five Theses on the church door at Wittenberg 500+ years ago. Essentially, it's the corkboard on the wall, the tale pinned on the donkey. Luther pinned (nailed with a hammer, so they say) that paper onto the church door, then walked away.

But wait, there's more. Luther didn't just walk away and allow that nailing to be the end of the story forever. He engaged. He spoke, debated, wrote, ran-for-his-life, preached, and essentially talked to anyone who'd listen...he engaged with others.

Luther's tools were different in the 1500s.

Martin Luther engaged with others via the spoken and written word. He used his mouth and his pen as his tools. Nowadays, we mostly use desktops, laptops and phones, microphones and cameras as our tools.

Luther's tools were the same as today.

Martin Luther might have engaged via different mediums of communication than we do, but the underlying essentials that make the communication work are the same as they were in 1517. He used his personal knowledge and intellect, speaking and writing skills, interpersonal skills, his passion, a sense of humor, and unwavering persistence. These are timeless human traits that garner respect and work toward positive results, whether with your neighbor next door or online around the world.

To say Luther "engaged" is an understatement. His engagement started the flywheel that became the Reformation and, depending on who you ask, is now considered one of the top 25 or 30 most influential people in the world, ever. I don't think Hive is going to get anyone in the top 30 on the list, but the formula is the same.

So, for the mental image in my brain, I'll now picture Martin Luther not hammering the nail (that's the money shot), but just afterward, after turning around from the church door. I'll picture him explaining to someone who'd watched the hammering, "What's that you just nailed on the door?"




Illustrated by me, @crrdlx.

Being the original Lutheran, Martin Luther likely might well have said, "Well, let's walk over to the tavern, grab a beer, and I'll tell you about it."

Wrap up

In my comment to ninong7, I referenced another "Hive-tips" comment by @finguru with simple, practical suggestions. That's about as clear as it gets to me. For a broader look, Hive whale @arcange wrote his personal look-back that's worth reading if you missed it and maybe worth a second read if you saw it already because it is so encouraging.



You ask, "What's Hive?" Watch the animation I made: The Hive Story Animation and you'll learn about this Web3 chain. The top benefits of the Hive blockchain: (1) no ONE person/group runs it, (2) YOU own and control your content, and (3) YOU earn the rewards that your content generates. Learn more or consider using my referral link to get your free account here and I'll support you as you begin. Alternately, you can see other sign-up options here. All my links: https://linktr.ee/crrdlx.

Sort:  

I've got to further this out a bit. Luther was way ahead with the idea of decentralization.

I learned today that PeakD chat is a great place for engagement. Probably because people go there when they want to engage with others - not for any monetary rewards. While browsing the chat, I saw your link to this post. Then your other links here to people worth engaging with.

And so it grows.

Recently, I changed my daily routine. So instead of randomly responding to people in my feed, I check my mentions and replies first. In doing so, I've become more engaged and enjoying the conversations. Also, I often get inspired to write something new.

From today, I've added chat to my checklist.

!LUV

@crrdlx, @keithtaylor(1/1) sent LUV. | connect | community | HiveWiki | NFT | <>< daily

Hive General chat | Type ! help (no space) to get help on Hive. Info

Made with LUV by crrdlx

While browsing the chat, I saw your link to this post. Then your other links here to people worth engaging with.
And so it grows.

This is how it works.
I also sometimes/often, try to go some different direction on Hive outside of my followers or my communities. Just aimlessly look around other places, kind of like getting into a rental car in a town you're unfamiliar with and just driving around.

Yes, check out the PeakD Sting chat for sure. I think that's going to be a thing going forward, could be wrong, but the convenience is real...if you're on Hive, you're already on it.

Great advice. Engaging, making some friends and joining some communities can go a long way I think.

I've been guilty of posting and walking away🤦‍♀️😖
Although any genuine feedback I've always tried to reply to.🥰 Over the past 5 years I've made couple of friends or whom I consider friends anyways.🤗 I don't use discord very much as I have a lot of issues with it.🤦‍♀️ So I don't socialize very much. Plus, I is use my phone as my means of accessing hive... texting sucks😔(I'd rather be typing) but you're right... Engaging and getting to know those here engaging or the ones you follow or whatever is the best way to organically grow. 🤗🤸‍♂️👏🥰

You write "any genuine feedback..." Yes. After posting it occurred to me that one of the main things is to just be authentic, sincere, be yourself, and to NOT try to be what you think "will work". People recognize authenticity, they also recognize fakery.

Exactly. Which, again if I'm honest I'm guilty of limited one-liner repliesor vote and no reply😖🤦‍♀️
But sometimes I run across someone's post and have nice lil chat.... like today. 🤗

So am I, feeling like no one is actually here to read. Changing that behaviour now. Still looking for my maven. Check out my posts!

I agree with the author that engagement is key to success on Hive. If you want to get noticed and build relationships, you need to be willing to interact with others. This means commenting on other people's posts, upvoting their content, and participating in discussions.

I also like the analogy the author makes between Martin Luther's Ninety-Five Theses and a corkboard on the wall. When you post something on Hive, it's like pinning a note on a corkboard. Anyone can see it, but it's just sitting there. If you want people to pay attention to your post, you need to engage with them. You need to explain what your post is about and why it's important.

I think this is a great lesson for anyone who wants to succeed on Hive. If you're willing to engage with others, you'll be well on your way to success.

I will try to learn from all of your replies.

Good thoughts @crrdlx :)

It's honestly true not just on hive, but anywhere.

The quickest way into people's awareness is to show that you care about the things they care about.

Dropping comments, engaging with other people's stuff is drastically more likely to slowly but surely find your tribe of people interested in your own stuff than just posting and hoping it spreads.

!LUV !ALIVE !PIZZA

Well said. Funny how simple it is, but for some reason we have to learn it (at least I did). Also, it takes some effort and time, and takes a bit of a leap of faith to step out there.

I just followed you. Feel like doing the same?

@crrdlx, @iviaxpow3r(1/10) sent LUV. | connect | community | HiveWiki | NFT | <>< daily

Hive General chat | Type ! help (no space) to get help on Hive. Info

Made with LUV by crrdlx

@crrdlx! You Are Alive so I just staked 0.1 $ALIVE to your account on behalf of @iviaxpow3r. (1/10)

The tip has been paid for by the We Are Alive Tribe through the earnings on @alive.chat, feel free to swing by our daily chat any time you want, plus you can win Hive Power and Alive Power delegations and Ecency Points in our chat every day.

But what if 500 years back there would have been 100 different manifests pinned on a churchs door? 😉
The one manifest who's writer engaged would have been the one
So I totaly agree
But all this doesnt help if you dont simply love hive and the people you meet.
And as anonymous as we may be here the most important thing is to simply be ourselfs following our interests.
!LUV

But what if 500 years back there would have been 100 different manifests pinned on a churchs door? 😉
The one manifest who's writer engaged would have been the one

I guess my thought on this that the engager would certainly have the headset and upper hand, but, what the posted on the church door would still matter. If it was nonsense or 16th century spam, the person would just move along. 😀

I asked Bing Image Creator about 16th Century Spam. Apparently, the tins were bigger back then…

16th-century-spam.jpeg
😉

That's hilarious! Looking at that image, so many questions come to mind:
Are those fish filets on the table?
Is that bacon, maybe, or fish loins on the log thing?
Why is he holding the blade of the knife and not the handle?
Why is he wearing chain mail and armor? Is he expecting a siege into the butcher shop?
WTH is that feather on a stick thing in the background?

Also, I didn't even know Bing had an image creator, now I do. Thanks.
!LUV

Yeah, I'm not the biggest fan of AI. But I can't draw. So I like to give it a try. Mostly, the images are a bit weird. But this one struck me as looking like it could be a massive can of ancient Spam. And now we know the recipe - bacon, fish, and feathers. Plus blood from holding the knife like that.
!LOLZ

What do you call a row of people lifting a giant mozzarella?
A cheesy pickup line.

Credit: reddit
@crrdlx, I sent you an $LOLZ on behalf of keithtaylor

(1/1)
ENTER @WIN.HIVE'S DAILY DRAW AND WIN HIVE!

@keithtaylor, @crrdlx(1/3) sent LUV. | connect | community | HiveWiki | NFT | <>< daily

Hive General chat | Type ! help (no space) to get help on Hive. Info

Made with LUV by crrdlx

@crrdlx, @beeber(1/5) sent LUV. | connect | community | HiveWiki | NFT | <>< daily

Hive General chat | Type ! help (no space) to get help on Hive. Info

Made with LUV by crrdlx

PIZZA!

$PIZZA slices delivered:
@iviaxpow3r(1/5) tipped @crrdlx

Congratulations @crrdlx! You have completed the following achievement on the Hive blockchain And have been rewarded with New badge(s)

You received more than 25000 upvotes.
Your next target is to reach 30000 upvotes.

You can view your badges on your board and compare yourself to others in the Ranking
If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word STOP

Check out our last posts:

Women's World Cup Contest - Recap of the second day
Women's World Cup Contest - Recap of the first day
Join the HiveBuzz Women's World Cup Contest - Register Before It Starts And Win Big!

You have done this very well. If one wants to succeed on this platform, one has to interact with people and work a lot. Then you can succeed here. Engagement is very important.