Social Media Negative

1686 Words4 Pages

Social Media is all around the world and affects everyone in its path. It affects men, women, boys, and girls, it 's a part of our everyday life. Social Media is a website or application that allows users to create or share information, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. People can easily access any information that they desire, and they can communicate with whoever they want. Companies use it to promote their products, so their consumers will purchase them. Social media can be a great tool to use, but with every great tool comes some bad qualities. Smartphones and social media have the power to hook us without us even knowing. Social Media can make us feel lonely, and there are trolls on the internet to make us feel even worse. In …show more content…

Once out of bed, we check our phones 221 times a day- an average of every 4.3 minutes- according to a UK study.” (Weisberg ). We are always occupied with our smartphones, whether it be texting, emailing, liking, tweeting, watching videos, or even playing a game. Our phones have the ability to fill the gap when we are bored, make us feel safe, and cause us to be more productive. Even though these are good qualities, smartphones also cause us to be frustrated and distracted. We are so hooked that we are changing our relationships with our families, friends, and even our romantic partners. Parents can just have bad as teenagers when it comes to smartphones, they can always be distracted, and this will cause their children to become frustrated. Turkle explains that phones and texting disrupt the abilities for teenagers to separate from their parents, which will cause conflict in adulthood. Some people may only talk to their friends off of social media and have rare personal interactions with them. “The decrease in confidants- that is, in quality social connections- has been …show more content…

With the new types of social media and smartphones, we are more connected than we have ever been before, but we are also lonelier than ever. In the article, “Is Facebook Making Us Lonely?” by Stephen Marche, he states that Facebook is at the forefront of all this unexpectedly lonely interactivity. “Facebook arrived in the middle of a dramatic increase in the quantity and intensity of human loneliness, a rise that initially made the site’s promise of greater connection seem deeply attractive.”(Marche). The effects that Facebook causes depends on how people use it. If people use Facebook to communicate with other individuals, by using the “like” button or commenting on a friends’ post, it will increase their social capital. “People who received composed communication became less lonely, while individuals who received one-click communication experienced no change in loneliness.” (Marche). People who receive more likes on a post on Facebook are less likely to feel lonely, while those who don’t receive as many feel more lonely. But if you are lonely on Facebook, you are also lonely away from Facebook. Loneliness in on the rise and it makes us miserable. It is difficult to diagnose, but the best tool to diagnose the condition is a series of 20 questions. “A 2010 AARP survey found that 35 percent of adults older than 45 were chronically lonely, as opposed to 20 percent of a similar group only a decade earlier.

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