Facebook brings out the best and the worst in me. Like many
people, I have become an addict. Research has shown that receiving likes for a
Facebook post activates the same receptors in the brain as cocaine. And like
cocaine, you constantly want more. But instead of chasing your friends around
the pub wondering if they’ve snuck off to the toilet for another line without
telling you, you keep checking back online to see if there are any more likes
on your most recent post to give you that little dopamine rush. And like any
addiction, it sucks away your time and your health without you even realising
it. Compared to other drugs, at least Facebook doesn’t cost you any money. But
that means there is no financial restriction to how much of it you can do. You
can binge and binge on posts, comments and likes to your heart’s content,
occasionally finding yourself lying helpless in a pool of your own vomit.
I know that I have a
fortunate life. I have a beautiful family, I have a job that gives me a large
degree of autonomy and that mostly provides me with a decent income. I get to
travel a lot, both for work and on holidays with my family. I’m happy to share
my experiences online with other people. Undoubtedly Facebook is a great tool
for keeping friends up to date with what’s going on in my life when I don’t see
them all the time. Particularly those of my friends who live overseas or
interstate where dropping around is not so easy. In fact, given how busy my
life has become, I don’t get to really see anybody as much as I’d like, even if
they live in the same suburb. So Facebook becomes a proxy way of keeping in
touch. But I know there is a fine line between sharing what I’m doing with
people who may be interested and outright narcissism. Facebook is the perfect
outlet when I have a streak of self-importance that means that I am compelled
to post something, because undoubtedly everybody must be as infinitely
fascinated as me with what I am doing or thinking at any given moment.
Conversely there is of course the receiving side of Facebook, which speaks to
different character traits. I’m genuinely happy for my friends when they do
well and when they are having a good time. I’m mostly happy to see pictures of
their lives, children, holidays, indulgences and celebrations. But I can’t help
at times feeling envy, or somehow inadequate by viewing some post or other
during periods where my emotions are not at the top of their game. I know I’m
not alone here and am conscious that some of my posts invariably will conjure
those feelings in others. The links between excessive social media usage and
loneliness, social anxiety and depression are well established by a load of
research over the last few years. I can see from my own experiences how this
can be the case. People living in more glorious houses. People on their five
star luxury or exotic holidays. People with their flash new cars or other toys.
In the old days keeping up with the Joneses usually just meant the neighbours
and people who you would see within your own social circles. These days the
Joneses are everywhere you look. No wonder there is an increase in mental
health issues in our society. If you’re not being made to feel inadequate in
some way by advertising, there’s always social media to do it for you. We were
already bombarded previously by forms of media such as TV and glossy magazines,
now we have Facebook and Twitter on our phones to make the bombardment almost
constant. And instead of well-crafted marketing campaigns, we have our friends,
acquaintances and that person I friended after spending an hour chatting in a
bar while on holiday somewhere a couple of years ago (was it in Bali?) to
remind us that our lives on occasions aren’t as exciting, stable, normal, fun,
affluent, carefree, social, serene, intellectual, creative or physically fit as
theirs. And if I catch myself in any way having thoughts of envy about people I
know, then I have guilt to contend with as well. I must not be a good person.
Surely I should always be happy with everything that anybody I know does or
has.
We all know that a view of a person solely through Facebook
is a fake perception. Everybody has their ups and downs. Sickness and death
visit us all. Happy photos in front of the Great Pyramid or the Eiffel Tower
with the perfect smiling family tend not to reveal the personal problems that
we all experience. It is a façade. Captured in a moment where perhaps
everything did feel perfect, but perhaps only moments before the next less than
perfect thing comes along to jolt the flow in our human existence. But on
Facebook, it is typically just those perfect moments that are presented. Most
people tend not to post the shit and despair. Not in any detail anyway. And
even if they do, it still only provides a one dimensional snippet of it all.
To me, when it’s all under control, Facebook is mostly my
personal photo album or diary and occasional soap box from which to yell my
views. Pictures for my mum to see of my family and for anybody else to look at
if they care or could be bothered. Posts for other people to click “like” on as
they skim down their newsfeed without even really giving the post more than a cursory
glance, but liking nevertheless, because in some way it seems deserved or owed.
Likes such as this can almost make the giver feel benevolent in their actions.
“I bestow on you the mighty blessing of my like”. Another flavoursome hit of
the social media drug.
Then of course there is the interactive side of Facebook. A
ride that only ever seems to lead into the abyss. Political or social issue
posts where reasoned debate morphs quickly into outright hostility, anger and
outrage. I know that I am excessively guilty of inciting people with
provocative posts. I believe passionately in what I believe, especially in
regards to what I consider issues of social fairness. I can’t fathom that
people really could think any differently to me on certain topics. I know for a
fact that my more political posts have bored some people senseless if not
offended them. I’d be stunned if a significant number of my Facebook friends
haven’t unfollowed me to save themselves from having to read some of my more
indignant rants about asylum seekers or how the government of the day is
shitting me. Fair enough too (you bastards!). I’ve been engaged in dialogue on
numerous occasions by people so caught up in their own ideologies that they
can’t see the point that I’m trying to make and it’s like we’re having
conversations about entirely different things. Some of the arguments I’ve been
involved in have become so heated that they have even threatened real
friendships in a way that would never happen in person. Even when the topic has
been something as benign as the football. Then there is another level below all
of this that is the true cesspit of social media. I don’t count any of my
friends (present or recently departed) amongst this dross. For some reason I
feel compelled to read the comments of posts on any news story, or political
article that I have read. Drawn towards them like Ulysses to the sirens with
the same inevitability of being wrecked on the rocks, but typically with the
absence of anything that could be referred to as a beautiful voice. I’ve
discovered hatred that I knew existed somewhere but was happy that it didn’t
really intersect with my life. I’ve read comments by people that are so abusive
you just wonder if there’s any chance that they could ever actually say those
things to anybody in person. So much bile. So much of the worst that our
species has to offer. People so caught up in their ideologies that to make any
opposing comment unleashes a torrent of vitriol. Some of the personal attacks on other people that I've read have been withering, often accompanied by extreme racism, sexism and violence thrown in for good measure. I stepped back a while ago from making
comments on public posts such as those of the major news outlets. Down that
path seems madness.
And now it’s time for me to step further away from Facebook as I’ve
known it. I thought about deleting my account, but I have so many photo albums
and memories in there that I just can’t do it. I’m trapped. I love the
“memories on this day” posts that Facebook displays just for me. Pictures of
Jazzy starting school or little Finn at Auskick. Baby Kimi in a caravan in
Broome. A shot of Tori and I out on a romantic night having fun together,
reminding us that it’s not all about who’s out working and who’s picking up the
kids. Photos with friends who I love dearly taken in all manner of places (and
states). It all hits me with the nostalgia drug to which I’m also addicted. I
want to be able to see what’s going on in friends’ lives and want to be able to
keep them up to date with what’s going on in mine. And I probably do still want
to yell to the world on occasions that locking desperate people up on an island
in the Pacific and torturing them is a fucking disgrace and that our country
should be ashamed. So the only way forward for me then is to adjust my habit.
If I can’t go cold turkey, I need some form of methadone. Even though like any addict, at times I'll probably relapse. I'm going to make an attempt at taking
away the negative but leaving all that is good. And this has started with a
very large cull. More like a Facebook massacre really. It’s felt cleansing. One
click of the mouse and someone else has been shuffled off my virtual coil.
Hundreds have been slain by the unfriend button. All Facebook groups have been
abandoned. Most pages have been unliked. Many of
the fallen Facebook friends are those who I’d actually love to see in person and share a drink,
a laugh and a conversation with. But like the despot who only needs to be upset
on one occasion to remove the head of a subject, many friends have been
terminated for the mildest of reasons. Some only by association and through
nothing at all that they have done themselves. Work related people – gone! Those
with friends of their own who have attacked me personally for daring to comment
in seemingly the wrong way on a post – gone! Those whose posts are too far to
the right for my liking – gone! Those that I just clicked on unfriend by
mistake without thinking it through – gone! Oh well. Sorry. Collateral damage.
I dare say that some of the survivors are probably thinking “why me? Why
couldn’t I have been culled so as to avoid being subjected to diatribes like
this? How can I sneak out of social media contact with this dementedly raving person
without them knowing”? I say, just go for it. Be bold. Click unfriend. I won’t
be offended. After all, it may just save me the trouble next time around :-)
