Sharing Your #LRTweetup Story – Pary VI

My Twitter Story by @melissaar

Over the year, I have met other people and gone to other tweetups. It’s a friendly and entertaining group who are there for you when you are up and are praying for you when you are down. They managed to save the dean of UALR Law School’s life. (well sorta) I’ve had the opportunity to meet people that I wouldn’t have met under any other circumstances and to share ideas with people whom I probably wouldn’t have had time if I had to do it one on one. It also reminds me that I am not alone and the world is bigger than the town I am in.

Read her full post at runmelissarun.wordpress.com

I have a #LRTweetup story, and I’ve never attended a Tweetup by @erniebufflo

I still can’t get over the fact that a group of people I’ve never “met” nominated me for an award, though I guess it’s a testament to my tendency to insert my loudmouthed self into the center of things, but more than that, a testament to this group’s welcoming attitude.  I can’t wait to meet each and every member of the #LRTweetup community.

Read her full post at erniebufflo.wordpress.com

How Twitter Saved My Life (kinda) by @jmdipippa

Twitter allowed  me to break out of the isolation my recuperation imposed. I don’t like to be cooped up and rarely sit still at work but moving was challenging and uncomfortable. Twitter gave me incentive to work on my recovery.  I tweeted the number of steps I had taken that day or my recovering appetite or my new Guitar Hero scores.  And the encouragement from my new twitter buddies kept me accountable to them and gave me even more incentive to take a few more steps the next day.  It kept me happy and helped me to become healthy.

Read his full post at ualr.edu/jmdipippa

Sharing Your #LRTweetup Story – Part V

Untitled by @plecroybrown

While only a little bit of information can be conveyed in 140 characters, a relationship with another person can be formed via multiple posts or direct messages over time. Forming relationships is the true power of Twitter and I feel that is where this platform will excel in the upcoming years. Like-minded people will gravitate  toward each other to form new partnerships or friendships and thus create new ideas, perpetuating the underlying creativity behind Twitter.

Read her full post at plecroybrown.wordpress.com

But What’s Your Real Name? by @laureneclark

I love to meet the real people with real lives and real names behind the nicknames we recognize from our minute-to-minute glances at our screens. We’ve all found ourselves in the middle of introductions referring to each other as @______. But nothing beats seeing each other IRL…and nurturing those virtually founded friendships. So don’t be surprised if, after the great things you and I may have shared on this Twitter-thingy, I smile and ask “But what’s your real name?” when we do finally meet. Because behind every good Twitter name…there’s a real person, #fine and #fabulous!

Read her full post at burstofquestioningwind.tumblr.com

How I Became a Fool for LRTweetup (in Three Acts)

ACT I: The Bald Man and the Challenge

I was introduced to Twitter by a preternaturally energetic bald man named @adambroitman. At the time he was Director of Emerging and Creative Strategy for Morpheus Media, before moving on to Director of Strategy at Crayon. He’s now Partner and Ringleader at Circ.us.

As a friend of @MaryroseWagoner, Adam was speaking at a PRSA luncheon on social media a few years ago, and he was incredibly nice, genuine and excited about the future of this medium. At the end of his talk, he encouraged the entire room of public relations professionals to create Twitter accounts. He challenged us, in fact, as communicators, to put Little Rock on the Twitter map.

So, I went right back to my office that same day and did exactly that. I opened a Twitter account, I mean. The rest wouldn’t come until much later, and as it would turn out, people I hadn’t even met would be responsible for meeting that challenge.

See, up to this point in my life, I was happy to remain relatively anonymous. I had a small circle of friends, many professional colleagues and an unlisted phone number. You could say I was more guarded than an iPhone prototype on a Saturday night, but that would just be mean. Putting myself out there, online, for Google to index and for all the world to see really made me nervous.

What if I said something stupid? I would most assuredly say something stupid. Whoever penned the words “Tis better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt” had never signed up for a Twitter account, I was sure of it.

But I wasn’t about to back down from Adam’s challenge.

So I took the plunge. I followed @adambroitman and a bunch of other people, including @chrisbrogan and @cc_chapman and @steverubel. I followed people all across the country, like @Scobleizer and @jowyang and @charleneli. I followed @TechCrunch and @SocialMediaClub and @Mashable. And I listened and learned from these folks and many, many others as I tried to understand this new form of communicating and connecting.

ACT II: Kind of like Magic: The Gathering, Except with Less Black

Fast forward a year and hundreds of (probably stupid) tweets later, and I still knew only a handful of local people on Twitter. Then something happened, some critical mass of adoption, participation and planetary alignment, and when someone said “Tweetup” out loud one day, the local Twitter scene blew up right before my eyes.

I watched as @LT created a hashtag, #LRTweetup was born and people came from all corners, excited to meet other local people on Twitter. Natalie ran to fetch nametags. We peeled them with glee and wrote our usernames in Sharpie marker, tittering at the complete silliness of it all, and we descended upon Sticky Fingerz like a parliament of geeky rooks. It was, in a word, awesome.

While Natalie and I may have started this hot mess, it was people like @tsudo and @alextcone and @bryanjones and @jgreghenderson who jumped in and organized us, blogged us, scheduled us and pushed us toward our first official charity event, Twestival. It was people like @amybhole who offered us @capitalbargrill and special blue drinks. Then it was all the rest of you, who came out despite your fears of what you might find.

And let me tell you, I am so glad you did.

ACT III: Only Fools Fall in Love with Hashtags

Watching this community grow has been one of the most amazing experiences of my life.

I’ve learned that #printlives. I’ve learned to #passonthegift and #taketimetogive and #reachoutandread. And I’ve learned to follow #ARwx at the first sign of bad weather, a hashtag deserving of its own theme music and tagline: “Come with me if you want to live.” Say it with the accent. It’s fun.

You all amaze me with your talents. I learn something from each of you on a daily basis. Your funny, endearing, ever so smart and generous words encourage me to keep writing, after suffering a case of burnout so severe I had to change careers. I watch you take care of each other and support each other. And you continually inspire me to be smarter, nicer and braver today than I was yesterday.

Really, what more can you ask from a group of total strangers you met on the Internet? We’re incredibly lucky to have been here in this moment, to see this unfold in precisely this way. It speaks to the immense power of this medium we share, and to our limitless potential as human beings to accomplish so much more together than we ever could alone.

I’ve learned from all of you to keep opening my mouth, stupid or not. And if that makes me a fool, or a geek, or a nerd, then I’m certainly among some of the best company I’ve ever known.

#thankyou #lrtweetup

Sharing Your #LRTweetup Story – Part III

These Are My People by @kerrijack

Last year, two friends I know professionally in town Natalie and Angel started joking around on Twitter that each were getting close to (I think it was) 400 followers. A bet was made that whoever got to 400 first got a drink from the other. My friend Stacey and I both perked up like Scooby Doo, “Drinks? Social? Fun?” Things took off from there. Let’s invite EVERYONE! So the call went out: We’re having a TweetUp! Anyone in Little Rock on Twitter, let’s meet up at Sticky Fingerz. We’ll be nerds. Won’t that be fun?!

Read her full post at damnyoulittlerock.wordpress.com

On Little Rock Tweetups by @mattbarnette

… I realize what kind of people are out there, and I, more than anyone (and this will seem strange coming from me, probably) am in love with the world. I am constantly amazed, dumbfounded, and learning about the world I live in and the people who inhabit it. Sure, when life on our planet is gone it will barely be a blip on the galaxy’s radar, but I am part of that larger community and it is beautiful and I am proud to have been a tiny speck of dust in it.

Read his full post at mattbarnette.com

Are You The Answer to My Mid-Life Crisis? by @pstrack

This is a community that has encouraged me to Take Time To Give. A community that has taught me that you won’t find a Gowalla at the Zoo, but you might find Monkey Boy there. A community that has shown me the power of 140 characters. A community that may despise presentations, but loves the Prezi. A community that has convinced me that Print Lives. A community that stays up all night, and is still able to  contribute incredibly during the day.  A community that not-so-gracefully informed us all that ice cream isn’t just a treat for kids!

Read his full post at pstrack.wordpress.com

I Didn’t Win an iPod. I Won a New Community by @alextcone

… it wasn’t until I went to an integrating media conference that I knew I would never turn back. @pstrack gave away several iPod Nanos. I didn’t win one, but after that day I won a new community. I met @amybhole, @cherylferg, @KatieMcManners, @RobMcBryde, @kerrijack and so many other exceptional personalities. #LRTweetup finally made sense. There would be no more holding back. My wife would permanently think me a dork, but I would forever be a card carrying member of the Little Rock twitter community: #LRTweetup

Read his full post at alextcone.tumblr.com

Sharing your #LRtweetup Story – Part II

At One Year… What #LRtweetup Means to me by @marleysmommarleysmom

We depend on one another for advice and support. It’s pretty awesome to me – especially since my support network here in Arkansas is limited by the fact that I didn’t grow up here. What #LRTweetup really means is that I have a group of people I can depend on to be authentic about everything from which shoes to buy to how much they retweet information about H1N1.

Read her full post at UALR.edu/tosmith

My LRtweetup Story’s Just Beginning by @stephhwilliamssteph

So here’s my story about how I don’t really have a story … yet…

…Why in the world would I want to involve myself in anything that limits me to 140 characters or less? Because it’s fun. Well, there you go: in less than 20…

I kept to myself a bit and recognized more tweeps than I actually talked to IRL. But I did hang out in the corner a bit with @kellimarks; got my pic taken by @laureneclark; spotted @jamiewalden money for a drink; and even won a door prize from @Heifer.

So I figure the more I go to these get-togethers, the more comfortable I’ll get. Then, I’ll really have a story to tell. Then, God help us all – unless someone cuts me off every 140 characters.

Read Stephs full post at StephsWonderfulLife.blogspot.com

My #LRtweetup story by @arkstfanmark

LRTweetUp is more than a social group or business networking program. The participants care about Central Arkansas and making it a better place. Helping local non-profits has been a big part all along. Choosing that path has been essential to the character of the organization. It reminds us to put others before self and that shapes the tone of our community…

We share a lot with each other, sometimes too much, but we know a lot of things about each other that our regular circles of friends and family don’t know about each other.

There is trust and genuine concern for each other….

…Quite a few of us have shared some of our worst days with each other and every time, the community has been there to share the pain. There have also been a lot of shared celebrations as well.

Read Mark’s full post at his ArkStFan Blog

Sharing your #LRtweetup story

As part of our 1 year celebration we asked you to share your #LRtweetup experience and the response has been an overwhelming and moving community narrative.

While I’d knew these stories would give people an idea of what it means to be connected to this group I didn’t expect to discover that I had no idea how people came to be involved.

These stories are funny, profound, touching, and give a glimpse into the hundreds of small interactions that turned a bunch of strangers into friends.

My @LRtweetup Story by @jgreghenderson greg

my 17 people I am following has turned into 370, and this little meetup that I was shy about has become one of the most important parts of my life…

…these stories are still being written. The book is not closed, not by a long shot. As this community grows and matures there will be more stories. Just like any relationship, not all of those stories will be good ones, and we will likely have hard times. I think I speak for others though that this is more than just a monthly gathering. It has become a very large part of my life.

Read his full post at StayClassyLittleRock.com

For all the tweeps I’ve loved before by @savannahb SBB

As a stay-at-home mom, most of my daily interaction had been with short people who had terrible conversational skills, and who regularly pooped on themselves. Twitter opened up a whole new world for me; a way to communicate with real grown-ups, who talked about real things (even if those real things were sometimes euphemistic. Ice cream, anyone?), and who were within a virtual arm’s length all day long…

…my circle of friends has grown by about 300, minus a few spambots and national companies. I feel like I am heard, even if I’m only talking about Adventures in Mommyhood. I feel less alone during the long days at home with the short people. I feel part of a real community; one that has grown not out of sameness or complacency, but out of a genuine want to know others and expand social horizons.

Read her full post at ChasingMyBees.com

What @LRtweetup Means to me by @cherylfergcheryl

It’s truly weird for me to call people I barely know my friends.  However, that’s the way I feel about most of the people involved in the Little Rock Tweetup community…

…At times I feel as though we are all trudging up the same steep hill just to make it through another day.  All the while, we encourage each other along the way.  We’ve gone through loses, illnesses and some major disappointments together in a little over a year.  Simply put, we have bonded…

…When we walked into the Capital Bar and Grill, we were loudly greeted by the LR Tweet up community there.  I felt like Norm walking into the bar on Cheers.

And that is what makes the LR Tweet Up Community great…

Read her Full post at ThatsNormalRight.com

Is Your Story Next?

We’ve got a lot more stories to share and everyone that contributes their story will be highlighted here.

If you haven’t shared your story yet perhaps these will inspire you to share your LRtweetup story.

To all of you, we’d like to say a sincere Thank you. The response has been wonderful!