Dear (Insert your name here),
Â
Nowadays, social mediums such as Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr have taken away our voice and minimized our ability to interact with human beings on a physical level. By âphysical levelâ I’m not talking about sex or anything promiscuous.
Â
I’m talking about the girl next to you who has her head down flipping through her touch-screen phone, pressing “like” on everyoneâs status and pictures.
Â
âWhat do you mean?â youâre probably wondering. Or probably not since youâre so preoccupied with checking how many notifications youâve received today instead of reading this.
Â
What I mean is we, as a society are all turning into “social introverts.â We blog, âlikeâ and use acronyms such as “gpoy” to extort who we are onto these social mediums that store all of our information. Weâre too lazy to explain who we actually are in person so we use social media as an outlet to connect to people.
Â
Â
While Facebook, Tumblr, and Twitter have provided us with an easy way to keep in touch with our so-called âfriendsâ I want you to ask yourself: How many friends do you actually have?
Â
How many of these Facebook âfriendsâ do you actually care about? Probably not that many, right? Nowadays, instead of hanging out with friends people prefer to like their statuses in order  to remind them that you still care. Itâs practically the same thing right?
[pagebreak]
The truth is we are all guilty of it. Yet unlike the Titanic, itâs definitely not too late and we can be saved.
So you â yes, you! â stop manipulating your life to fit these âsocial mediumsâ⊠ugh, donât even try to deny it. How many times have you thought in your head âO.M.G., this would make such a great profile picture!â or âO.M.G., this is going on my Twitter!â Please just stop.
You can call me rude but maybe the next time I want to get to know someone, Iâll just go check his or her timeline on Facebook. I mean, thatâs what this is all about right? These mediums have caused us to lose touch with our social skills and replaced them with incentives such as who can look the coolest on the internet, who parties the hardest and whoever doesnât have a Facebook probably doesnât really exist, right?
Wrong. Being recognized and liked on the Internet versus real life are two different entities.Â
For the past eight months I deleted my Facebook and in doing so, I lost contact with half of the people I regularly talk to. I realized that without Facebook my âfriendsâ and I do not put a lot of effort into actually trying to keep in touch. One of my self-proclaimed close friends on Facebook thought I had transferred to another school! And although my phone number remained the same, my absence on Facebook has caused my online social networking presence to become obsolete. Yet on the contrary, my physical relationship with others has dramatically improved. After being absent from Facebook for eight months, I reactivated my account only to find people greeting me with posts such as âYouâre alive!â and âWhere have you been?â
Well, the truth is that Iâm right here. Iâm the girl sitting next to you (invisibly), watching you scroll through your phone tweeting about how much your life sucks instead of actually living it. Maybe back in the day there was a reason why it was called a yearbook and it was used once a year instead of everyday.
However, the situation remains the same: the online social networking platforms are slowly, but surely, killing the physical being inside of us.
So on behalf of all the people who arenât as socially outgoing online and the not-so-tech-savvy people out there, please just put down your Androids, iPhones, and iPads and get in touch with reality.Â
Get up and actually go hang out with all of these people you supposedly âmissâ and show the world you donât need the internet to be the social being that you are.
P.S: Remember itâs “love thy neighbor” not Facebook thy neighbor.
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â
Â