Navigating the algorithmic Internet.

The experiment continues.
I apologize for the somewhat clickbait title. I just find myself doing that here.
This is exactly why I need out. š¤·
Iām not quitting Substack, but I am deleting the app.
I thought Iād write a short piece about this since Iāve chatted with many of you about Substackās evolution into a social media. Apparently itās trying to be YouTube now?
Platforms inevitably evolve for the most profit. Because capitalism. This means they quickly morph from cozy creative havens into fast paced reactionary noise. The more enraged we are the more we engage, the longer we scroll, and the better it is for the investors. I saw this happen on Instagram and YouTube. So I can see the writing on the wall for Substack.
What I find frustrating is that we canāt have online spaces for specific purposes or energetic capacities. I miss having a platform for just photos and words.
Why canāt we have more variety between the tech platforms we have online?

Iāve been looking at alternatives since last year when Substack introduced Notes. I was this close to investing in Substack when they were taking money from writers to āmake a writing platform.ā
Then they suddenly decided to go for the Twitter audience and launched Notes.
Nope.
Not investing in a social media platform, thank you.
First I tried Ghost.org. I moved my whole membership over there in early 2023. I even tried to use Ghost to build Self Publishing 101. They donāt have a free tier so I bought an annual membership, but even so it has very restrictive limits on file size. Even my short Self Pub podcasts were too large to upload.
I cancelled the subscription before it renewed.
Then I tried to delete the app and do inbox only.
This made me realize I was subscribed to WAY more newsletters than I could read and I started unsubscribing. But it still wasnāt quite right.

Substack struggles with delivery rates to email inboxes (maybe especially Gmail.) I noticed I wasnāt getting ās emails – even though I was on their paid tier. I looked in Spam. I searched the Promotions folder. Archived messages. Nothing. I followed this advice from Substackās support. Still no emails.
Frustration at missing weekly emails from Cody led me to downloading the app again.
Once I had the app I found myself scrolling and posting to Notes again.
That is where I found someone talk about reading Substack with RSS.
RSS you say? I remember that from the dark days of the early internet.
I am an Internet Elder.
One of the early adopters who used to hand code my own websites.
The internet was a different beast back then.
I never really got into RSS because I only followed a handful of blogs which I kept bookmarked in my browser. Each time I read a blog post I made a very intentional choice to open the bookmark and spend time there.
But I knew what RSS was.
Compared to social media it sounds like the holy grail.
A chronological, algorithm free, feed with no ads?1
Sign me up.

It was pretty clear that RSS was the way forward for me, but itās taken some time to implement the transition.
Iām using two RSS apps right now. Iāve moved most Substack to Feedly. When I have a bit of time over a cup of tea I can scroll through everyoneās long form posts and do a bit of digital foraging.
Publications Iām subscribing to are kept in a separate feed using Net News Wire. This is insurance that I donāt miss anything they post even if Gmail fails to deliver again.
I finished that process today.
And I deleted Substack.
I may pop into notes on a weeklyish basis to respond to comments. And I may sometimes open up the window to ārestackā in Safari to share a post.
But I wonāt be living there any more.
This feels right for me.
Iām also experimenting with Substack alternatives. Right now Iām sending weekly emails over on Beehiiv to half my list. (The most engaged folks. If you want more emails from me you can sign up here.)
Meanwhile, folks keep finding me here. At this point Iām trying out monthly digests on Substack that point toward my blog or digital compost heap. Part of this pivot is a desire to archive my long form writing on my own website.
And Iāll continue using Substack as a course library platform for now. Thereās a lot of functionality here available for smaller creators that usually requires a massive investment to something like Podia or Kajabi.
Iām not telling you what to do.
We all have unique creative ecosystems and have to make the choices that work for us. But Iām sharing what Iāve done in case itās helpful. I often find myself paddling upstream dominant culture. So Iām no stranger to doing things in a different way. This is just the newest iteration of that.
Here are some of the resources I found inspiring and useful during this shift.

Screentime by Becca Caddy
This is a light read with actionable prompts to consider what boundaries you might need online. My biggest takeaway from this was learning about the emotional contagion scale and having an additional framework for understanding my autistic experience of hyper empathy.

Filterworld by Kyle Chayka
This one is a dense read (I confess to skipping parts – especially the chapter about Tik Tok) that digs into the history of computing and algorithms. If you want the cliff notes version you can listen to this podcast chat with the author.
Social Media Escape Club
Have you met Seth?
His posts have made a huge impact on me. Not only in reframing how Iām engaging with online platforms⦠heās also inspired me to buy a roll of film. After shooting digitally for over a decade Iām excited to witness the magic of light hitting film again.
Slow Lived Substack
Another inspiration is my friend who embodies slow lived values online. She has a passion for Substack and what it can do for you and your creative work. But she also doesnāt push you to use it in a particular way. Claire offers coaching and mentorship for artists, writers, and multipassionates.
And conversations like this oneā¦
Thankful to Kerani and others who have hashed this out with me on Substack Notes, and comments, and newsletter replies.
It helps to know Iām not alone.
The final part of my shift has been developing and spending time in my Creative Compost Heap. š±
Iām recentering my energy on my own artistic practice. Then sharing my work (a la ). Somewhere along the way the ācontent creationā started coming first so Iām essentially inverting my online experience. Iām already seeing the fruit in my creative work and in the depth of connection Iām having in comments and email replies.
Iāll continue to keep you updated on this experiment.
Happy to chat in comments.
Iām planning to check in on a weekly basis rather than trying to keep up with comments as they come. Something I used to do that Iām circling back to. š«
Cheers,

P.S. If you want scrappy weekly updates from me rather than monthly digests hop on my Digital Foraging list over on Beehiiv. š
Turns out Feedly has ads. Iād highly recommend Net News Wire for an ad free RSS experience that has no desires to become āprofitable.ā
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