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Is the social engagement on your profile picture a validation of your self-esteem? Till a couple of years back, the many lengths you go to curate a perfect selfie would be considered downright vain. Over the past half decade we have all become our own PR firms. Always figuring out a way to get more traffic, ‘likes’ and comments.
And the smartphone is alienating us. The more we expect from technology, the less we expect from each other.
JAMA Pediatrics (The Journal of the American Medical Association) has conducted 10 studies to see if there is a link between social media use and depression. Alarmingly, every single study showed a significant correlation.
‘Facebook depression’ is real. It is worse for the adolescents. The good news is that you are not alone. But by definition, you kinda are!
In another research done by the American Academy of Pediatrics, the adolescent participants study revealed that “their emotional health declined when they were ignored on social networking sites”, while others thought “their friendship was in jeopardy when their friends didn’t like their posts.”
The stress of constantly monitoring Instagram and posting snaps is taking its toll. A New York University study of 10 popular schools in the US found that teachers were worried that their students were incapable of talking face-to-face outside their peer groups.
Forget about finding themselves in real life, discovering the real world – with roughly 60 million images uploaded to Instagram everyday, psychologists are seeing that adolescents, like most of us, are just trying to find a version of themselves that gets the maximum hearts.
Wonder if there is an unwritten popularity ranking which is based on your social media score!
Sorry to pop your bubble kids, a double tap on the Instagram screen doesn’t determine validation but the study noted that the teenagers who got less likes, felt more depressed and got lonely.
Mark Zuckerberg wrote in 2012 that social media is bringing out empowerment in society. But the digital togetherness is not just empowering, it can also leave you lonely in a crowd. The carefully curated digital life of your friends might force you to think yours isn’t good enough.
It’s an increasingly disturbing situation.
You’re getting used to being alone in a crowd.
I often say, “I’d rather text than talk.” Psychologists find this behaviour worrisome. With smart phones, the art of real interaction is on its way out. The Facebook posts, the comments and tweets can never replace the face-to-face human conversation. Social media allows us to be in charge of our culpability and our conceit.
You get what I earlier meant by, the more we expect from technology, the less we expect from each other?
You don’t need an expert to tell you that happiness depends on the quality of your friends and not quantity. At the cost of sounding all AAish, the first step to learn to log off is to acknowledge that you are unnecessarily sucked up in your phone all the time. Only then can you break the habit.
Someone told me once, we can all live life a little better if we had hands to hold rather than click a selfie. That someone couldn’t be more right. Think about it.
(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)
Published: 01 Jun 2016,05:05 PM IST