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	<title>Scottergories.com &#187; nightmare family vacations</title>
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		<title>Why I Am Anti-List or How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Vacations</title>
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		<comments>http://www.scottergories.com/why-i-am-anti-list#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jul 2009 06:09:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Scott Cowley</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Backyard Marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blogging]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lists]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nightmare family vacations]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.scottergories.com/?p=95</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I hate lists. I&#8217;m talking about the list that fits the mold of &#8220;92 YouTube videos to get you through an entire work day without accomplishing anything.&#8221; A quick glance at my Twitter feed shows three of these monstrosities, including &#8220;220 Ways to Get More Traffic to Your Website &#38; Increase Your Business,&#8221; &#8220;30 pianos [...]
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<p><img class="size-medium wp-image-97 alignnone" title="tearing-a-list" src="http://www.scottergories.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/annoying2-300x257.jpg" alt="tearing-a-list" width="240" height="205" /></p>
<p>I hate lists. I&#8217;m talking about the list that fits the mold of &#8220;92 YouTube videos to get you through an entire work day without accomplishing anything.&#8221; A quick glance at my Twitter feed shows three of these monstrosities, including &#8220;220 Ways to Get More Traffic to Your Website &amp; Increase Your Business,&#8221; &#8220;30 pianos around London for impromptu singalongs&#8221; and &#8220;40 Great Adobe AIR Applications for Designers and Developers.&#8221; Lists are the blogger&#8217;s quick substitute for creativity. They undermine the whole point of learning and they destroy family vacations. In that order.</p>
<p>There&#8217;s no blogging without a degree of hypocrisy and so I&#8217;ll openly admit that I wrote a list once and posted it on another blog I write for (the post was a list of blogging tips). I was lazy and needed to pump something out on a time crunch. The list didn&#8217;t have any credibility to it. I had never even tried a couple of the things I was suggesting. It was pointless and idiotic. And then the post got a bunch of pageviews &#8211; more than a slew of other posts that I considered more substantive. And because of that, I felt pointless and idiotic. I feel a sense of pity and maybe loathing for a generation of web users (myself included) that cannot identify the difference between quality and crap online, choosing to associate/confuse quality with lists, how-tos, and all the templated garbage that people can spit out without an ounce of thought or research.</p>
<p>Do you really read a list as if you&#8217;re trying to memorize it or learn from it? Like with most content online, we&#8217;ve learned to scroll the text with our eyes. The brain&#8217;s doing nothing with the message. The synapses don&#8217;t even have to fire, it&#8217;s that worthless.</p>
<p>Lists are a distraction. The writers are merely banking on the fact that your desire for entertainment will trump your desire to learn. I would take a two-item list with enough substance for me to actually learn something over any half-baked list that proves only that the writer can count past the number 20.</p>
<p>Lists have one redeeming factor. They provided me with the contrast needed to enjoy great vacations today. Let me explain.</p>
<p>Lists turned my childhood family vacations into multi-day exercises in impatience and downright malice. My mom has many virtues, but one paradigm she lived by was the need to &#8220;check things off the list.&#8221; Our family vacations were always structured that way. Mom knew what &#8220;tourists see&#8221; in any give place and that became her list. (By the way, don&#8217;t ever plan a trip in such a way that your kids  conclude that your tastes and preferences are just a carbon copy of <a href="http://www.tripadvisor.com">TripAdvisor</a>). Our vacation schedule would become so tightly packed with checklist items that she would forget to factor in meals, delays, and fatigue. That is not a vacation. That is a recipe for disaster.</p>
<p>Today, I love to travel. In my married life, I&#8217;ve learned how to vacation enjoyably merely by looking at what my family did and doing it differently. I&#8217;ll write more about this later. In essence, my vacations have a higher ratio of &#8220;exploration time&#8221; (with a lower ratio of checklist items). I owe that to lists.</p>
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