I have friends who refuse to use Facebook or any of the so-called Social Media (SM) sites. They don’t twitter or tweet, and could care less about being linked in. If they “dig” something, they don’t feel compelled to tell the world about it.
I have other friends who spend hours each day posting to the SM sites. They share EVERYTHING with their SM “friends.” If they are at an amusement park with their kids, they give hourly updates….they share pictures of their root canal…they let us know when they are about to go to bed….it goes on and on to the point I wonder when do these folk LIVE?
I guess like most people I am somewhere in between when it comes to posting – however, I do wonder where we as a society are going with all of this?
Don’t get me wrong…I LOVE reading the posts of family members and friends I don’t talk to on a regular basis. Even those “friends” who post every thirty minutes, often have something informative to say…the question is, do I have time to read it?
Here’s the deal --- who has the time to keep up with the daily activities of over 10 people (Octomom included)! I can barely keep up with the activities of my own household!
I sometimes don’t know how to respond to posts or what to think….if a “friend” who has been married for years posts that they are single, does it mean they are separated, divorced, or in the middle of a nasty fight with their spouse? Or are they just looking for a new love? (More on this in a later post this week.) And, if an unmarried friend says they are no longer single, does it mean they got hitched in Vegas over the weekend, or they got a cat? (Yes, some of my “friends” are that strange.)
How often do you use SM sites?
The next few blogs I’m going to explore this phenomenon … Some of my upcoming posts:
“Friends and Other Strangers”
“My Life’s Better Than Your Life”
“What Part of ‘married and not looking’ Don’t You Understand?
And… “If I Reply to This Post You Will Never Speak to Me Again!”
Stay tuned and send comments….



posted by johnH56
A recent article in a Science magazine reports that evolutionary psychology is viewing the change in communications and increased human contact quite favorably. Over the last decade the average person has gone from some 30 or so significant people in their lives to well over 100. More and different contacts make for a richer and potentially more fulfilling individual life. Networking ends up being good. Humans are a social animal.
But if the individual has improved by way of a richer social life has society gotten better for all of that. It still recall being in a line at a bank. The lady 4 in front of us was on her cell phone. We all got to hear about her root canal- just more information than I wanted to know and certainly nothing that made that particular day richer.
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posted by LinnieFB
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