Look at the wonderful world of me. Coping with other people's social media uploads
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Scrolling social media feeds and timelines, especially when we’re feeling low or anxious, can make us believe that everyone else is coping better, having more fun and generally being more wonderful than we are.
Constant showcases of self-improvement, happy holiday snaps, dinner in nice restaurants, people working out in the gym or doing yoga in their spotless living rooms (when they’re not cooking something amazing in their lovely kitchens)...
If this sounds familiar you’ll know something of the effect that other people’s need for approval can have on us.
We’re going to look at
The psychology of ‘likes’.
How we can maintain meaningful social media usage without needlessly comparing our lives to others.
Why self confidence and approval are not the same.
Self confidence vs approval of others.
They are both fragile and they both make us feel good when they work but they are not the same.
Self confidence is a state of mind achieved through recognition of our own abilities and successes. It gives us the wherewithal to act without reference to others or the need for reassurance. It can be dented though and we only truly find out how much we have when we need to use it but it can also be ‘banked’ in the form of memories we can draw upon when necessary.
Approval is someone else letting you know they like what you are doing. It gives us a nice feeling but tends to be a more fleeting experience than the feeling we get from achieving something significant. Approval works in the short term to give us a lift when we’re feeling low but in order to be effective we need to actively keep seeking it, like a shark that has to keep swimming. Approval, not self confidence, is what we get from social media.
Some questions
Is someone else thinking you are Ok more important to you than actually being Ok?
How do YOU show up on social media? Describe yourself as seen in this format.
Before you post something on social media ask yourself what you are hoping to get from the experience.
Will sharing it provide a missing element to the experience?
The psychology of ‘likes’.
Dopamine is the brain’s ‘pleasure chemical’. We get a shot of it every time we taste something nice, see something beautiful, get paid, buy something we like.
Like many other things that make us feel good, the effect can be short-lived which leads us to seek more of it. Trouble is we can’t always buy a new pair of shoes or get thanked for doing something awesome every time we feel unhappy.
Fortunately social media is available 24/7 to give us almost instant reaction and gratification; well done, you look great, nice shoes, you have a lovel;y home/ baby/ car/ holiday/ cat… ‘Likes’ are a microshot of dopamine that fades almost as oon as it registers, a sprinkle of sugar on an otherwise monotonous routine.
Of course wanting others to value our achivements is nothing new but the instantaneous gratification we get from social media makes us impatient with the non digital world which takes forever to recognise our achievements. Worse still it makes us less willing to start something that will not receive instant recognition; the potato patch, cleaning the car, learning to rollerblade, getting fit.
Likes and other social media notifications make us feel good. The brain makes what are known as neuro associations with them. The trouble is our brains quickly become desensitiesd and we need more, like any other addiction.
Some questions
How do you recognise the validity of the experience without social media?
What woould it be like not post it on social media?
What have you been putting off because it will take too long?
How we can maintain meaningful social media usage without needlessly comparing our lives to others.
To do this there are some things we need to recognise.
Firstly the highlight reel. This is our life as seen on social media, or our timeline; its all the selected, crafted , edited, filtered and posed content that we allow our followers to see. Deep down we all know it is not representative of our lives but we post it because it looks like the one we should be living.
There are two problems with this:
(1) Knowing this is not a true representation of our lives does not, bizarrely, prevent us from believing that other people’s timelines, filled with laughter happiness and productivity ARE representative of their lives and it leads to anxiety and depression.
(2) The need to capture these experiences in order to share them not only divides our attention in the moment but it causes us to view experiences and important occasions in terms of their suitability for upload to social media.
The next thing we should consider is the concept of ‘Social Currency’.
Social Currency leads us to quantify our self worth by what others think of us.
Of course, if we do something awesome and share it on social media likes can be the icing on the cake. It validates what we did by adding a numerical value to it.
This can poison it too. An insufficient level of appreciation can lead you to question the level of your your achievement.
Nobody liked the pics of your cat pawing at the window? Maybe it wasnt that funny. Only five views of that selfie you just posted? Maybe you look lonely and sad. Just six likes of your new shoes after three days? Maybe all the people in your network aren’t your friends afterall.
Thirdly FOMO or Fear of Missing Out. This is the reason most people cite for not shutting down social media accounts even when they bring no joy.
Fomo, like many other forms of isolation, opriginates in early humans. As pack animals, being separated from the herd could mean death. Social media isolation, the knowledge that others in your network are interacting without you, can have the same effect and triggers stress and anxiety.
It can develop into a vicious cycle of feeling left out, checking social media and, through law of attraction, finding evidence that we are still being left out.
The feeling that somewhere something amazing is happening and that they are being deprived of something they should have based on social norms.
Some questions
Authentic self presentation on social media has been proven to reduce FOMO, so does looking inwards, journalling, being in the present moment. What changes can you make to achieve this?
.
What do I want to achive? What do I want my life to be like?
Is someone else thinking you are Ok more important to you than actually being Ok?
How do YOU show up on social media? Describe yourself as seen in this format.
Before you post something on social media ask yourself what you are hoping to get from the experience.
Will sharing it provide a missing element to the experience?
Top tips
Our brains only process information in silence. But we become overwhelemed when we’re online. Don’t bring the devices to places where you get silence.
Self confidence is doing something awesome and NOT posting it. It’s living the experience fully. It’s knowing that it didn’t need to be validated by anyone who wasn’t there. It’s recognising and celebrating it.
80% of scial media uploads are about the person who posts them.
Don’t follow, don’t stalk, don’t obsess.
The addiction is not to the phone, it's to the dopamine hit we get when there’s something on there.
Beware the passive aggressive status war.
Resist the temptation to constantly check your phone by transfering your social media accounts to the computer and scrub them from your phone.
Professional success is dependant on focus and concentration. Soc media fragments your attention. If you spend large portions of your day being distracted it can permenantly deplete your capacity to sustain concentration.









