Social Media or No Media? Which Would You Choose?
“Whoever controls the media, controls the mind.” ~ Jim Morrison
Let’s talk about social media, or the media in general and what it does to our emotional and mental wellbeing.
I have a friend whose family is from Africa and her grandfather lived until he was 127 years old. They say it was because the family moved him out of the city, and into the countryside, cut him off from all media, so that he could live blissfully and stress free with his family and the beautiful nature.
I have another friend from Vietnam. They did the same thing. When their elders got old, they chose to protect their family members from the media and moved them to a beautiful location to live media free so they could live longer and healthier lives.
It is well known that the Media (social media, news media, etc.) can cause us stress. Especially the television news. The stories that are told to us are generally negative and frightening. I personally try to limit my exposure to negative news topics because I am a very sensitive person, and I can get very depressed about the state of the world. And while isolating oneself from the media can make us potentially live healthier stress free lives, what are the costs?
Social Media is a topic on it’s own which can cause stress because of:
- Trying to keep up with the Joneses with what is popular or what others have
- Keeping up with ourselves and the need to portray our ideal image
- Being addicted to technology
- Losing our privacy
- Prying people
- Identity fraud
- Relationship/Friendship drama
If you had to choose to either be media and stress free (ignorance is bliss), or informed but stressed out and miserable? Which would you prefer? Can you have both? Do you care?
I think the happy medium is to be able to choose what content we are exposed to. Essentialism, coined by Greg McKeown, would say we should choose to expose ourselves to information that brings us value, and disregard the rest. A dear friend of mine says it’s always important to be learning (which requires learning about what is going on in the world), but we should have a choice on what kind of information we get and go to trusted, unbiased (ideally) sources. We should also explore all angles of a story or issue, and not blindly accept what is being told. For example, read the comments sections and discover other intelligent interpretations.
What do you think? I’d love to hear your thoughts!
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