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A Flourishing Micro-Community

Jake is blossoming

By Scott Christenson🌴Published about 7 hours ago • 5 min read

Jake walked in full of hope.

Eva sat behind a reception desk, radiating a well-practiced smile. “Welcome to Blossom!”

“First day of work!” He matched her smile watt-for-watt.

“We know, Jake.” Her eyes flicked briefly to a camera perched beside her monitor. “Have a seat. Cathy will be with you in three minutes.”

Three minutes didn’t give much time. He took in the company logo on the wall: Building Flourishing Micro-Communities.

He cleared his throat. “A pretty inspiring goal, isn’t it?”

She glanced up. “What is?”

“Building flourishing communities?”

“We are flourishing!” Eva agree, then quickly returned to studying her screen.

Reddit warned against phone-scrolling at a new job, so Jake spent the next two minutes staring at the logo, analyzing the words one by one like Rorschach blots. It all sounded so… California. So positive!

Cathy Hollburn of Cincinnati Ohio, had been unhappy at Oak Village High School, unhappy at Ohio State University, and unhappy with her parents. She was now extremely happy at Blossom in San Mateo, California. Once a year, she even had time to drive over the hills to Santa Cruz. She would sit at an outdoor table at the Crow’s Nest, order a plate of calamari and a Sauvignon Blanc, and stare at the Pacific Ocean until the sun dipped low enough to paint the sky the color of the dying embers of an Ohio campfire. Proof, she told herself, that she had blossomed into the self she was meant to be.

Jake watched as Cathy burst into reception.

“Welcome to Blossom! I’m Cathy, Head of User Empathy. We’re thrilled to have you joining our mission,” she chirped. Cathy sported an asymmetrical bob and held a devilish twinkle in her eye, a combination that shouted Silicon Valley tech leader.

Cathy ushered Jake onto their open-plan floor, where dozens of employees hummed with happy purposeful energy like altruistic bees.

“Let’s introduce you to the team!”

First up was Bob. "Bob's our wizard of vegetarian progress," Cathy winked.

Bob grinned and shook his hand with callused fingers that suggested gardening or weekend rock climbing. "Bro, we're revolutionizing plant-based unity. Remember when it was just 'vegans versus the world? Now we have legumes vs lentils. Synthetic meat vs unprocessed diet. And this year, yeast-positive versus anti-yeast. Boom: 700% greater engagement! It's all about empowering niche identities."

Over Bob’s shoulder, a social media feed scrolled:

@YeastIsLife: Yeast delivers bioavailable Vitamin B12!

@NeverYeast: Hitler loved yeast! Coincidence?

@YeastIsLife: classic ad-hominem, again.

“Jake?” Cathy pulled Jake’s attention away from the monitor. “I’d like to introduce you to Lila, our Non-Faith Micro-Communities lead.”

A woman in flowing robes glanced at Jake and started talking rapid-fire in a valley accent. "Hi~~! Social media used to be atheists versus the faithful. So binary! We have helped the atheist community find micro-community. The Trad-Atheists want to debate priests. The Post-Atheists want to move on and stop talking about God.

The Trad Atheists call the Post-Atheists ‘cowards who won’t finish the job.’ And now, the anti-natalist doomers went to war with the secular humanists. One group says bringing children into this dying world is immoral; the other says reason and science will save us. Behold today’s glowing engagement heatmap!”

Jake had a thought as he stared at the matrix glittering with millions of posts. “Shouldn’t they maybe be arguing with the evangelicals ruining the country?”

Cathy’s smile tightened ever so slightly. “Jake, we don’t share our personal views on race, religion, and politics at work.”

“Sorry,” he muttered, wondering why he couldn’t talk about religion with the head of Non-Faith Micro-Community.

Lila, the woman in flowing robes, rescued him. “It's like how vegans engage more with vegetarians than with carnivores. People who aren’t the same can’t engage. Apple and oranges. But a cucumber? Slice a cucumber top to bottom, and watch the two halves engage each other over which side is the real cucumber.”

So, engage was code for argue. He figured it out. It sounded…pleasant. Smarter.

“Jake, what did you do before this?” She was asking him a question, and it took a second to collect himself and put together an answer.

Jake had spent 3 years being a Wall Street asshole. Every year, a senior manager would give him a speech on “Maximizing shareholder value,” and then he and his coworkers would spend all year trying to find ways to make Americans pay more for their mortgages. He realized he wanted to add value, not subtract. He packed up and headed to Silicon Valley. "Time to change the world," he told himself, and rented an apartment in San Mateo, giving himself six months to find a job.

“Finance.”

Lila's face flashed boring. “Interesting! You’ll have to tell me more another time,”

Next, he was introduced to Miriam, Knitting Vertical Lead, and learned they were segmenting knitters into groups like ‘loop purists’ and ‘knot radicals’. He didn’t know there could be so much ‘engagement’ between knitters. “So, this helps knitters?"

"Absolutely! It's like evolutionary branching: diversity sparks growth. We're empowering knitters to find their true tribe."

They moved on to Sophia, the Head of Media Commentary. She was sharp-dressed, held a tablet full of analytics graphs, and radiated intellectual intensity.

"Ah, Jake, welcome to the discourse dojo," Sophia said, her voice crisp. "Do you remember when NYT comments were endless, well-capitalized rants no one read?. We optimized for contention. Retention soared 620%! It is ensuring every voice finds its correct length in a tailored arena."

Jake raised an eyebrow. "But aren't they being shown a false reality?"

"That's legacy lingo. We're empowering readers!"

Jake next went to the "Heartland Harmony" pod, where the Middle America verticals clustered.

Kurt, the Guru for Football Rules was Bald and built like a linebacker, talked about building tribalism in an area previously known for team building. Kurt cleared his throat, “micro-community, through awareness of football's nuances!” he told Jake, before glancing over at Cathy, “Look Cathy, I used a big word.”

Cathy smiled. “You’re doing great, Kurt. Positively flourishing!”

Greta, the Community Curator for Gun Owners, explaing how they are segmenting bow-hunters from rifle purists, diving gun owners between between .22 minimalists and .308 maximalists. “We’ve created 37 passionate eco-systems. Our users are going ballistic!"

Jake wanted to make a joke about the bow hunters going ballistic, but restrained himself.

“Your micro-communities are flourishing!” he said, already parroting their Silicon Valley patois.

"See? We are building communities, engineering enlightenment!” Cathy said. “And... we’re working on a new segment later this year,” she moved in closer, whispering confidentially, “Did you ever notice how people one inch taller… look down on you?”

Jake looked up, meeting her gaze an inch or two above his.

Cathy noticed his discomfort. “Don’t worry, we’re all on the same team here!”

“We are?”

“Micro-community is for the non-Blossoms.” Her fingertip waved at millions of texts of people 'engaging' scrolling up the screen. She noticed the time. “It's already lunch time, Jake. I’ll take you to the cafeteria.”

“Cafeteria?”

“We don't go out for lunch. Out there, they are agreeable conformists. We are building micro-community. Most people will never understand, but I’m happy you do.”

Jake realized she was right. One needs to find their own people. Their own tribe. Other people who get it. Or else life is just a series of misunderstandings.

Jake poured himself a bowl of quinoa porridge and took his assigned seat in the cafeteria and thought back to everything he didn't like about his old life in New York, about society in general, and about how good everything felt at Blossom.

A Blossom promotional video played on the screen in the cafeteria:

“Just in time for the Christmas shopping season, Blossom is rolling out Haptic Sensors. Your skin will crawl every time you walk next to someone from an opposing micro community. Imagine 24-hour real-time community awareness!”

Satire

About the Creator

Scott Christenson🌴

Born and raised in Milwaukee WI, living in Hong Kong. Hoping to share some of my experiences w short story & non-fiction writing. Have a few shortlisted on Reedsy:

https://blog.reedsy.com/creative-writing-prompts/author/scott-christenson/

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Comments (2)

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  • Rick Henry Christopher about 5 hours ago

    I want to read this. But I am so so tired right now. So I’m putting this place marker here to let you know that I will be back tomorrow.

  • Sid Aaron Hirjiabout 6 hours ago

    this could happen in our lifetime-love the story

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