Managing the Discord Overwhelm
Added 2020-05-12 14:54:24 +0000 UTCIt seems like every other person has a Discord server and is inviting you onto it these days (and then you get there, and nothingâs happening on it! What is that, yâall!) Someone asked me how to engage with Discord without wanting to cram a pillow over your head and this is a common enough question that I thought Iâd answer it for everyone because these feels, I feel them. I find Discord overwhelming too; I know people who are on thirty+ servers and I donât know how they donât explode from stress. I couldnât handle it! The Jaguar brain is a delicate instrument, easily addled. Here, then, are my tips for keeping Discord from discombobulating me. Maybe they will work for you!
Choose your servers wisely. If youâre completely new to the Discord paradigm, think of each server as a clubhouse where people hang out to talk. Like a club, each Discord server has a vibe, a microculture, and an activity level. Some Discord servers are huge, busy, and impersonal; others are so quiet you wonder if anyoneâs shown up. Ever. Some are heavily moderated, and some are âanything goesâ. In the same way that you might join a few clubs and decide that theyâre sapping your energy, or you donât like the group, or they ask too much of you (or too little of everyone else), you should pick and choose which servers you participate with carefully.
Corollary: it is totally okay to quit the ones that arenât working for you. Donât leave them sitting on your sidebar. It will probably make you feel weirder than just removing them. You donât have to explain why youâre going eitherâyou donât owe anyone an explanation, and honestly all itâll do is make everyone uncomfortable. If you want to go, then go!
Mute enthusiastically. Discord allows you broad silencing powers! Use them! Muting allows you to suppress notifications so you donât see new activity unless you want to. You can mute entire servers, if you donât want them in your face all the time⊠or, more selectively, you can mute channels within servers. (Think of channels as rooms within the clubhouse of the server. Most servers use channels to segregate discussion of topics or give groups a smaller space to talk.) The foremost stressor for me in managing Discord is having all the servers and channels constantly notifying me that new things are happening⊠muting those pings keeps me from feeling like I have to constantly check things.
Use the right portal. Discord has three clients (that I know of!): an app for your phone, a desktop app that you download that works like a normal program, and a webpage interface that keeps interaction in your browser. I know it sounds ridiculous, but I find the Discord experience very different depending on which portal Iâm using. When I first started out, I exclusively used the website and it felt to me like⊠well, a website I could open and close, ignore as a tab, etc. It didnât feel like it âlivedâ in my pocket. Segregating the emotional/mental experience was much easier when it was on the website. But it also felt more cumbersome, and a little like I was talking through a glass pane.
Because I manage a server, I wanted to keep an eye on it more frequently, so I downloaded the phone app. That turned Discord into a more text-message-like system, and on the phone it feels adjacent to the experience I have chatting with friends via text. The desktop app, which I settled on finally over the website when Iâm at a computer, feels more like my memories of IRC or chatting on Mucks: thereâs a separate window with lots of people hanging out, that I âhang out withâ as well, idly, the same way I would coworkers in an office. Those two apps have become my tools of choice: they give me the right combination of distance and immediacy. But I admit, I wouldnât have settled on them had I not had a server I wanted to keep a closer eye on.
One (or some combination) of these feels is going to work better for you than the other. It might be that the segregation of the website tab is more mentally bearable than having it on your phone⊠or it might be that you prefer âbundlingâ the real-time feel of the interactions with similar apps on your phone, making your phone your preferred âthis is how I talk to people instantlyâ device. But invariably the advice I find on dealing with Discord and other real-time chat glosses over (or doesnât mention at all) the varying emotional/mental impact of how you reach the chat, and for me the portal makes a huge difference in how much I can handle.
Be mindful about your participation. Every server has expectations about participation, and matching your style and energy to the serverâs makes a big difference in your comfort level. Some servers donât care if you lurk (lurking being reading without ever participating); some servers would prefer you check in now and then. Some busy servers want you to jump in at any point but wonât help you out if you do; others will swarm around new people and help them ease into the waters. Some servers will pay big dividends to people who invest time and energy in them⊠others are kind of a wash, so you might as well lurk. Observing a server for a while to see if its culture suits you will save you a lot of time and energy.
Once you decide whether you want to participate, have some peace with your choice. If all youâve got time for is showing up for book chat once a week, then do that and donât fret about spending more time there. If you decide youâd like to participate more, then go for it, and donât sweat not having been more active when you first arrived. If you decide the serverâs not for you, then head out and donât look back!
***
Those are my personal strategies. I know people who handle dozens of servers fine, and enjoy the experience of visiting lots of places without ever committing to them; Iâm on the opposite end of the spectrum, where I like to invest a lot in one or two places, and then pass all the others over. Iâd say âthis is because I run a serverâ but itâs not: I was like this even in the early days of the internet, when I was telneting (telnetting? Help?) into Mucks and Mushes. I think, really, the only reason I gravitated toward running my own place (and I always do, no matter what platform Iâm on), is because it allows me to adjust the microculture to suit me.
I no longer run a Muck (obviously, those being from the dark ages of the internet, the before times when there were no pictures). But my Discord server is run on similar principles: I like it to be friendly, organized, and busy. And we are! But even granting that, I donât keep on top of every channel on my server. Hereâs my line-up:

I try not to over-channel things, because I feel like a billion channels overwhelms me. And other people possibly, but if my own server overwhelms me Iâm doing it wrong. The grayed out channels are the muted ones, and only light up when someone has messaged me directly. As you can see, the only channels I get notification on are the two channels about spoilers for my work (#vault and #darkroom), and the Kherishdar-only discussion channel, #tsuni! I even have the server muted as a whole, so that when I open the app it doesnât jump out and yell at my eyes: âLOOK LOOK THERE ARE NEW MESSAGES WHY DID YOU GO AWAY THINGS WERE HAPPENINGâ
Stress, yâall. I donât need it. >.>
We are, I daresay, the friendliest place to hang out on the internet. But I would because I am biased that way. If youâre at the Discord tier and havenât tried it, I encourage you to give it a chance for a few days, see if you like it. Hereâs more info on it, have a look! đ
Comments
Yours is my first and only. I really appreciate the welcoming warmth and the ease of popping in and out. Some days I spend a long while, but there are times when life overwhelms.
SheltieMum
2020-05-12 23:26:12 +0000 UTC