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Síochána Arandomhan's avatar

I agree. I broke the habit of sharing cute family moments on social media almost 3 years ago. I wasn’t making any money off it; it was purely to share with family, friends and acquaintances and experience their attention and approval, through love emojis etc. But doing such a thing regularly creates a performative perspective: the awareness of an audience absolutely does creep into the intimate moments. It took me months after quitting to stop thinking in “Facebook updates” Occasionally, one will still pop into my head. But I no longer feel any desire to share my private life on this performative way, and on the rare occasions I do make a Facebook post it’s with a great deal of thought and even anxiety: the dopamine rush is gone.

The other side of this is I do feel a desire to be visible, to be connected, ti take risks and be part of a larger discourse. But this desire predates social media and having ceased creating social media content, I can seek to better understand it. For me, writing more thoughtful, rare, and lengthy posts on my blogs feels more authentic. They don’t get anything like the attention my Facebook posts did, but then if I’m honest with myself, nobody owes me their attention. I’m not that special. A few people have said they miss my Facebook presence, but the ones that really care, can get ahold of me other ways. If they don’t want to, then I don’t need to be there for their entertainment (as the song says LOL).

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PoppyGordon78's avatar

As a teacher of 13/14 yos, I can see the impact of this on the development of kids. No more are the boundaries between ... well anything. They have no concept of the division between home and school, formal or informal, appropriate or inappropriate. All lines have been blurred (thanks post moderns). A student shared the other day that he had to fart. First time in my career for that; also for kids mocking me - while I'm right there! They all think they're little social media stars.

Growing up in an age where nothing is private, nothing is sacred, nothing is not worth sharing, please get me a time machine. I'm just grateful for memories.

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