The Incredible
Lightness of Being on Social Media
Recently
there has been talk about people leaving social media for various reasons,
especially Facebook because of its use of account holders’ information for
financial gain. However people feel about that, users on Facebook and other social
media sites must accept terms of service, but more than 50% probably have not
read the fine print. This does not mean what these sites do with personal
information is ethical, but it does indicate that users have a chance to not
accept those terms of service.
These
are the times that try our souls, but perhaps that can be said about many
moments in the history of the human race. During my lifetime I recall a number
of times feeling scared about things, as if the world were coming apart – wars,
riots, natural disasters, and political turmoil all seemed to weigh me down.
I
don’t know if it is a comfort or not to think that many generations have had
similar anxieties, but right now seems a difficult time for many people, yet
that burden may have a bright side – because life is a series of a good times
and bad times, and the heft of the darkness is necessary in order to appreciate
the light, but light is not lightness. Light purifies and is cathartic after
the heavy dark times, but lightness is merely a distraction, allowing us to
drift somewhere between light and dark.
The Anomaly of Social
Media
The
thought of going home and reading a good book used to be comforting to me, but
now I come home from work and feel compelled to sit down, turn on the laptop,
and “check on things,” which is my euphemism for my using social media. It is
not enough that I have been checking on things on my phone throughout the day –
this is just a more thorough checking on things.
What
am I – and apparently millions of my fellow human beings – so fixated on
checking out? Of course, the answer is all those sites that connect
me somehow to other people – Facebook, Twitter, and the rest of those places
that draw me to them. I want to see if someone has liked my posts, and I want
to see if other users like the posts that I have liked. It is a relentless
drive to reach out, but nothing is tangible in reality. It’s a virtual sea with
lots of virtual ships that I will observe from a distance but never get to
actually ride on them.
The
problem with social media is it antisocial by nature. Besides the current
divisiveness that has its origins in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, there
has been a sharp edge to social media that leaves wounds that don’t always
heal. There is always that one person looking to start a fight, and social
media provides millions of opponents on a silver platter. The problem is that
it is not an even playing field for many users who are there for benign reasons;
therefore, the possibilities for negative outcomes are endless.
I Like It Anyway
Despite
the obvious problems with social media, I like it anyway. I am drawn to go on
these sites each day, and I know I should be doing other things, but I cannot
kick the habit, which is the reason why these sites are successful. The are
like Lays Potato Chips – you cannot consume information from just one post –
because you want to ingest them all.
I
enjoy seeing posts by friends and family members who share photos from
vacations, blizzards, and barbecues. I have watched some of my relatives and
friends’ children grow up on these sites, and that is part of the pleasure and
the lure to go on them; however, the majority of posts I see are not of this
nature. There are numerous political posts from both sides of the aisle, rants
about other issues, and a good deal of frivolous matter (like Bollywood videos
and obscure movie clips).
The
time spent on social media is a guilty pleasure to be sure but, despite all the
diverse posts that I see on these sites, I don’t come away with anything
substantial. This goes back to the life well-lived question. Most times I don’t
feel good about being on social media and sometimes feel guilty. It is not like
the feeling I get when reading Langston Hughes’s poems, seeing Macbeth on stage, or listening to
Mozart’s Requiem; these things
elevate my soul despite their heft. Being on social media is more the frivolous
experience – I know I’m wasting time and I like the fact that I am even if it
is embarrassing.
The Thought of
Quitting
As
someone who has never smoked, I have seen the difficulty people have in
quitting that habit. The thought of quitting social media comes now and then,
but it quickly dissipates because my desire to go online again is stronger than
the notion that I should refrain from doing so. There have been times when I am
away on a trip and unable to access these sites, and I am fine with that and
don’t feel like I am missing anything. Soon as I get home though I want to get
on the sites again, give an update on my trip, and post pictures.
If
I am brutally honest with myself, quitting social media means ending my public
online celebration of self. Because of social media the self has come to mean more than it ever has before and, if you are
supposed to love yourself before being able to love others, judging from what
is seen on social media, there’s a lot of love going around. Think of the selfie as the best perversion of that concept that has ever existed.
The selfie explosion says, “I want to post all things about me” and has enabled
sharing ourselves with the world, but at what long term cost is yet to be
determined.
Still,
I got up today and thought again about quitting social media, but my posting this
essay is proof of how well that went.
The Lightness
The
problem with social media is the lightness of it. There is no substance, no
heft; it is mostly fluff that may be pretty but is vacuous. If someone tries to
make a statement that is meaningful, it goes either unnoticed or ignored.
Only
the flamers get attention – whether they lean left or right – and then the
haters get sucked in like moths to that flame. Then there are people who want
you to “share” their fluff. They’ll write something icky like, “I’m going to
see who reads this whole post.” Man, does that get me scrolling faster than
Jesse Owens away from that one.
In
the age of social media, gone is the notion of scholarship, integrity, and discourse.
Either you see something their way, or you are excoriated as being the enemy,
so it’s a case of either agree with the fluff or get out of here. There is no
middle and that is why things are falling apart.
In
Milan Kundera’s exquisite novel, The
Unbearable Lightness of Being, he writes, “The
heavier the burden, the closer our lives come to the earth, the more real and
truthful they become.” I think of social media as that feather floating in the
wind. It sure seems carefree, but it’s never going anywhere. Real world things
do weigh us down, make us understand a truth that we used to know before our
heads were lost in the iCloud.
Kundera
continues, “Conversely, the absolute absence of
burden causes man to be lighter than air, to soar into heights, take leave of
the earth and his earthly being, and become only half real, his movements as
free as they are insignificant. What then shall we choose? Weight or
lightness?”
No
one seeks a burden or conflict, but as Kundera notes those things do define our
lives and make the good times seem even better. Unfortunately, on social media conflict is happening all the time – sometimes alienating family members
or friends. Perhaps many users are like rubberneckers who stop traffic in order
to look at an accident, for they can get their entertainment watching others go
at it. It all seems so superficial and meaningless at times
– a lightness that seems never-ending.
Accepting Social
Media for What It Is Not
I
suppose that I am staying on social media because I am accepting it for what it
is not – a place to go for information, facts, and serious dialogue. I can fulfill those needs in other ways.
Accepting social media and all its imperfections, I know I
will continue to enjoy seeing my friends and relatives’ posts, laugh at the
occasional funny post, and get to waste some time for the joy of it. Sure, the
real world is out there with all its burdens and rewards, but sometimes it
feels good to get away from it all and embrace the lightness for all that it's worth.
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