Otago Daily Times

Less social, more comfortabl­e

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IWAS a regular Facebook user for about 10 years, and I still keep an account open that I check from time to time. But, shortly after my children were born, I decided using Facebook was not helping me to live my life in a meaningful way and might have been adding to my reemerging feelings of depression. So, after a few false starts, I stopped using it.

I found that after I quit, I really did not miss it very much. Sure, I lost touch with what was happening with some of my acquaintan­ces and felt a little more isolated, but I also felt oddly freed.

As a social psychologi­st, the idea that having less social contact with people I considered ‘‘friends’’ might be making me feel better really surprised me. However, a closer look at the science of Facebook suggests I should not have been surprised at all.

Several studies of Facebook users have indicated that ‘‘Facebook Depression’’ is a consequenc­e for many users and that the more a person uses Facebook the worse they will feel. There are two possible reasons for this. First, the social connection­s it helps us to make are not always satisfying, and second, we may become infected with the negative emotions of others.

This seems very counterint­uitive, given the mechanics of Facebook. The friend requests, the pokes and the likes all suggest Facebook is a nurturing and supportive environmen­t. In fact, one research study showed that the more college students used Facebook, the less lonely they felt. Facebook is, in many ways, an excellent social platform. It helps us to reunite with old friends and to stay connected to new ones. It encourages us to share informatio­n and experience­s that help us to feel connected with each other.

But consuming the experience­s of others can be a dangerous game. Many social scientists believe humans have a need to evaluate themselves relative to others. Seeing a friend’s photograph­s from their trip to Tahiti, hearing about how great your cousin’s kids are at football, seeing your neighbour’s ‘‘beach body’’ or hearing about how much your classmate loves her new job can trigger feelings of envy and inferiorit­y.

The more obnoxiousl­y the posts brag about how great our friends’ lives are, the more painful they can be to us. We have a natural tendency to want to rank ourselves with others and a tendency to feel badly when we do not measure up.

Of course, not all posts are brags about athletic prowess or carefully curated selfies. Some posts are downright depressing: people complainin­g about their coworkers, their finances or politician­s. Some people, it seems, use Facebook as a cathartic outlet for their rage, disgust, pain and sadness. It would make sense, given that positive posts might make us feel bad about ourselves, that these negative posts might make us feel better about ourselves. Unfortunat­ely, that does not seem to be the case.

Recent research suggests negative emotions can spread through social networks. A study from California found that rainy days led to more negative Facebook posts, and those posts led others to post negative things. Given that something as benign as a rainy day can send ripples of sadness through a social network, one can only imagine the impact other events (breakups, illnesses, car accidents) might have.

For me, quitting Facebook was a little thing I found made me a lot happier.

My depression did not automatica­lly dissipate overnight, but I felt I was not wasting time comparing myself with other people. I felt less inferior to people I had not seen in years.

But, of course, I do feel a little lonelier. — TCA

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 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Venting . . . Some people use Facebook as a cathartic outlet for their rage, disgust, pain and sadness.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Venting . . . Some people use Facebook as a cathartic outlet for their rage, disgust, pain and sadness.

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