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Main Character on Main, Unhinged on Spam

Niamat Dhillon Student Contributor, Manipal University Jaipur
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at MUJ chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

There are two versions of me living inside my phone and they do not speak to each other.

On my main account, I am composed. Curated. Thoughtful. The captions are intentional, the photos are selected like they are auditioning for a magazine cover, and every post feels like it went through a tiny internal committee before being approved for Instagram. This version of me drinks iced coffee like it is a personality trait, posts sunsets like she discovered the sky personally, and somehow looks like she has her life together even when she absolutely does not.

On my spam account? I am a menace to society.

Blurry photos. Voice notes as stories. A 3 a.m. rant about something that did not matter at 9 a.m. Screenshots, inside jokes, aggressively niche humour that would make zero sense to anyone outside the group. No filter. No plan. Just vibes and occasional emotional damage.

And the craziest part? Both of these people are me.

We are all living this double life where one version of us is presentable and the other is real. And somewhere between the grid and the chaos, we have built an entire social system that quietly acknowledges this split without ever fully questioning it.

Picture of girl (me) with red velvet cake and \
Original photo by Niamat Dhillon

My main account is who I think I’m supposed to be.

My main on Instagram is not fake, and that’s what makes it worse. It is real, but it is edited real. It is me after a quiet internal negotiation where I take everything I am and ask, okay, but what version of this is acceptable, digestible, impressive enough? It is the version of me that understands optics. The version that knows how to exist in a way that won’t confuse people, won’t alienate them, won’t make them pause mid-scroll and go, wait… what? It is clean, coherent, and slightly aspirational. Not too much, not too little. Just enough to feel like I have things together, even when I am one minor inconvenience away from spiralling into a playlist and silence.

Every post on my main feels like it has gone through a tiny, invisible approval committee in my head. The outfit, the lighting, the expression, the caption. Even the casualness is curated. I will take 30 photos to get one that looks like I “just happened to exist beautifully in that moment”. I will write a caption, delete it, rewrite it, soften it, sharpen it, make it sound like I didn’t try when I very clearly did. And the most exhausting part is that this process has become second nature. I don’t even question it anymore. I just… do it. Like breathing, but with better lighting and worse mental peace.

And then there is the audience. The quiet, constant awareness of being seen by people I don’t even talk to. Mutuals, acquaintances, that one person from first year, someone’s cousin who followed me once and never left. They are all just… there. Watching. And I am performing a version of myself that makes sense to them, even if they don’t fully know me. My main becomes a space where I am not just expressing myself, I am managing perception. It is not about lying. It is about selecting. Highlighting certain parts, muting others, smoothing out the edges so I can be easily understood. And somewhere in that process, I become slightly… distant from myself. Not completely. Just enough to notice it when I stare at my own grid and think, she looks like she has it together. And then immediately follow it with, do I?

A girl (me) eating a piece of cake.
Original photo by Niamat Dhillon

My spam account is who I actually am at 2:17 a.m.

My spam is where the committee gets fired.

No meetings. No approvals. No “does this align with my aesthetic”. It is just me, in whatever state I happen to be in, hitting post before my brain has the chance to overthink it into silence. This is the account where I exist without editing the edges off myself. The lighting is bad, the angles are worse, the thoughts are half-formed, and the emotions are… loud. Unapologetically loud. At 2:17 a.m., I am not trying to be understood by the masses. I am trying to get something out of my system before it consumes me.

There is a very specific freedom in knowing that the people watching this version of you already get it. I don’t need to explain the backstory. I don’t need to translate my thoughts into something universally palatable. I can post a blurry screenshot, a random line that hit too hard, a chaotic rant that makes zero sense without context, and it lands. Not because it is perfectly crafted, but because it is perfectly specific. It belongs to a moment, to a feeling, to a version of me that exists without needing to justify herself.

And the pace is different. On my main, everything is slow, intentional, calculated. On my spam, it is immediate. Reactive. I feel something, I post it. I think something, I say it. There is no waiting for the “right time”. There is no saving it for later. Because later, it won’t feel the same. My spam is not about permanence. It is about capturing the now, even if the now is messy, confusing, or slightly unhinged. Especially if it is.

But even in that chaos, there is something deeply grounding. Because for once, I am not trying to be a version of myself that makes sense. I am just being the version that exists. No filters, no framework, no performance. Just me, at 2:17 a.m., feeling everything a little too much and deciding, yeah, this deserves to be seen, even if it’s not pretty.

A chaotic party scene.
Original photo by Niamat Dhillon

The audience difference: 2000 viewers vs. 20 people who know my childhood trauma.

The difference between 2,000 people and 20 people is not just a number. It is an entirely different emotional ecosystem.

On my main, 2,000 people can see me. That sounds powerful, but it comes with a quiet, constant pressure to be understandable. Because when that many people are watching, you cannot assume context. You cannot rely on shared history. You cannot post something that only makes sense to a very specific version of your brain at a very specific time. Everything has to be slightly generalised, slightly translated, slightly smoothed out so it lands across a wide audience. You become careful, not out of fear exactly, but out of awareness. You know that what you post can be interpreted in a hundred different ways, and you try to control that without even realising you are doing it.

On my spam, those 20 people do not just see me. They know me. They know the backstory behind the joke, the emotion behind the meme, the reason a random sentence hits harder than it should. They have context. History. Shared experiences that make everything I post feel fuller, heavier, more complete. I don’t need to explain myself because they already understand the language I’m speaking, even when it’s fragmented. And that changes how I show up completely.

With 20 people, I expand. I get specific. I allow myself to be contradictory, messy, evolving in real time. I can post something that doesn’t have a neat conclusion, something that is just a feeling mid-formation, and it still lands because the relationship is already there. There is no need to perform clarity when there is already connection.

And I think that’s the real difference that no one talks about. It’s not just visibility versus privacy. It’s visibility versus being known. My main is where I am seen in fragments that I have chosen. My spam is where I am understood in ways I don’t have to curate.

And maybe that’s why I keep both.Because sometimes, I want to be visible. And sometimes, I just want to be held by people who already know who I am, even when I don’t package it neatly for them.

A girl (me) lying down, smiling in a hammock in Port Blair/Havelock Island.
Original photo by Niamat Dhillon

Why I overthink one post for 3 days but spam 17 stories in 10 minutes.

There is something deeply humbling about how I can spend three full days overthinking one post for my main on Instagram like it’s a legal document, but then casually upload 17 chaotic stories on my spam in the time it takes to boil Maggi. The contrast is not accidental. It is psychological. On my main, every post feels like a statement. It lives on the grid. It sits there. It represents me in a way that feels… permanent. And permanence makes me careful. I start thinking about angles, captions, timing, relevance, how it fits into my existing feed, how it might be perceived by people who only know me in fragments. It stops being about the moment and starts being about the impression.

So I hesitate. I draft, delete, redraft, stare at it, leave it, come back to it like it owes me emotional clarity. I ask myself questions no one else is asking. Is this too much? Is this too random? Does this even feel like me anymore? And the more I think, the heavier it gets. The post becomes less about expression and more about representation. It carries weight it was never meant to carry.

And then there is my spam, where time moves differently. There is no permanence there. Stories disappear. Context is assumed. Stakes are nonexistent. So I don’t think, I just act. I feel something, I post it. I laugh, I upload it. I spiral, I document it mid-spiral. Seventeen stories later, I don’t even remember the order, but I remember the relief. Because I didn’t pause long enough to filter myself into something smaller.

The difference is not effort. It is fear. My main demands perfection. My spam allows imperfection. And when you remove the pressure to be perfect, you suddenly realise how much you actually have to say.

The fear of collapsing both worlds and being seen too clearly.

There is a very specific fear that lives quietly in the back of my mind. The fear of those two worlds, my main and my spam, colliding. Not dramatically. Not in a scandalous, “exposed” way. But in a subtle, unsettling way where the people from my main start seeing me the way my spam audience does.

Because on my main, I am legible. You can look at my feed and understand me quickly. There is coherence. A sense of control. A version of me that feels… put together, even when I’m not. But on my spam, I am not trying to be understood instantly. I am trying to be real-time. And real-time is messy. It contradicts itself. It overshares, retracts, laughs at the wrong things, feels too much, says too much, and then moves on like nothing happened.

If those two versions merged, what would people see?

Would they be confused? Would they understand? Would they feel like I misrepresented myself, or would they finally see the full picture? And more importantly, am I even ready to be seen that clearly?

Because clarity is not always comfortable. Being perceived in your entirety means people don’t just see your highlights, they see your in-between. Your inconsistencies. Your unfinished thoughts. The parts of you that don’t fit into a neat narrative. And there is something terrifying about losing that layer of control.

So I keep them separate. Not because I’m being fake, but because I am protecting complexity. I am allowing myself to exist in multiple forms without forcing them into one easily digestible version. And maybe that’s okay. Maybe not everything about me needs to be visible to everyone at the same time.

But still, sometimes I wonder… what would it feel like to not split myself this way?

A girl (me) smiling.
Original photo by Niamat Dhillon

Who am I when no one is watching… and why don’t I post her?

This is the question that lingers longer than I’d like to admit.

Who am I when there is no audience? No viewers, no close friends list, no imagined perception sitting quietly in the corner of my brain. Who am I when I am not thinking about how something looks, sounds, or might be interpreted?

She exists. I know she does. She is softer in some ways, louder in others. She is less structured, less concerned with coherence. She does things without immediately translating them into content. She feels things without asking whether they are “post-worthy”. She lives moments fully instead of framing them.

And the uncomfortable truth is… I rarely post her.

Not because she isn’t interesting. Not because she isn’t valid. But because she is harder to explain. She doesn’t fit neatly into captions. She doesn’t have a consistent aesthetic. She contradicts herself. She evolves too quickly to be documented in a way that feels complete. And social media, by design, likes things that are stable, recognisable, easy to understand in seconds.

So I edit her. I translate her. I take parts of her and reshape them into something that can exist online without confusion.

But sometimes I catch glimpses of her in my spam, in those random, unfiltered moments where I didn’t have time to overthink. And every time, there is this quiet realisation. Oh. There you are.

And then I wonder, gently, without judgement… why do I feel like she needs to be adjusted before she can be seen?

Maybe the goal isn’t to post her perfectly. Maybe it’s just to let her exist more often, even if no one ever sees it.

Because at the end of the day, the most real version of me is not the one that performs the best.

It’s the one that doesn’t even know it’s performing.

For more such articles, visit Her Campus at MUJ.

"No pessimist ever discovered the secrets of the stars, or sailed to an uncharted land, or opened a new heaven to the human spirit."

Niamat Dhillon is the President of Her Campus at Manipal University Jaipur, where she oversees the chapter's operations across editorial, creative, events, public relations, media, and content creation. She’s been with the team since her freshman year and has worked her way through every vertical — from leading flagship events and coordinating brand collaborations to hosting team-wide brainstorming nights that somehow end in both strategy decks and Spotify playlists. She specialises in building community-led campaigns that blend storytelling, culture, and campus chaos in the best way possible.

Currently pursuing a B.Tech. in Computer Science and Engineering with a specialisation in Data Science, Niamat balances the world of algorithms with aesthetic grids. Her work has appeared in independent magazines and anthologies, and she has previously served as the Senior Events Director, Social Media Director, Creative Director, and Chapter Editor at Her Campus at MUJ. She’s led multi-platform launches, cross-vertical campaigns, and content strategies with her signature poetic tone, strategic thinking, and spreadsheet obsession. She’s also the founder and editor of an indie student magazine that explores identity, femininity, and digital storytelling through a Gen Z lens.

Outside Her Campus, Niamat is powered by music, caffeine, and a dangerously high dose of delusional optimism. She responds best to playlists, plans spontaneous city trips like side quests, and has a scuba diving license on her vision board with alarming priority. She’s known for sending chaotic 3am updates with way too many exclamation marks, quoting lyrics mid-sentence, and passionately defending her font choices, she brings warmth, wit, and a bit of glitter to every team she's part of.

Niamat is someone who believes deeply in people. In potential. In the power of words and the importance of safe, creative spaces. To her, Her Campus isn’t just a platform — it’s a legacy of collaboration, care, and community. And she’s here to make sure you feel like you belong to something bigger than yourself. She’ll hype you up. Hold your hand. Fix your alignment issues on Canva. And remind you that sometimes, all it takes is a little delulu and a lot of heart to build something magical. If you’re looking for a second braincell, a hype session, or a last-minute problem-solver, she’s your girl. Always.