The Organic Web
If we lived close to nature in an agricultural society, the seasons as metaphor and fact would continually frame our lives. But the master metaphor for our era does not come from agricultureâit comes from manufacturing. We do not believe that we âgrowâ our livesâwe believe that we âmakeâ them. Just listen to how we use the word in everyday speech: we make time, make friends, make meaning, make money, make a living, make love. â Parker Palmer, âLet Your Life Speakâ (97)
You know what else we make? Websites.
People talk about growing communities and growing brands, but does anyone talk about growing a website? If they do, Iâm going to guess itâs steeped in the startup connotations of the word, i.e. growth (exponential at that) and scale. But nobody talks about scaling their garden. Thatâs not a garden anymore, thatâs an industrial farm. But I digress.
Growingâthatâs a word I want to employ when talking about my personal sites online. Like a garden, Iâm constantly puttering around in them. Sometimes I plow and sow a whole new feature for a site. Sometimes I just pick weeds. And sometimes I gather fertilizer (a.k.a. horse shit) from others online and try to grow something with it. My websites are my garden: a place to grow and experiment, to cultivate and nurtureâthe projects themselves, but also myself.
Most of my favorite websites out there are grownâhomegrown in fact. They are corners of the web where some unique human has been nurturing, curating, and growing stuff for years. Their blog posts, their links, their thoughts, their aesthetic, their markup, their style, everything about their siteâand themselvesâshows growth and evolution and change through the years. Itâs a beautiful thing, a kind of artifact that could never be replicated or manufactured on a deadline.
This part of the web, this organic part, stands in stark contrast to the industrial web where websites are made and resources extracted.
You can make a website in a day, but it takes years to grow one. So plant one now if you havenât already. Or go tend to yours. Iâll just be over here weeding and watering.