One of the reasons the Mrs and I likely won't have kids. There's just too much doom & gloom everywhere.
Suit yourself. The state of the world is
actually one of the reasons I'm
more determined to have more children. At minimum, I will hopefully propagate a good set of thoughts and beliefs and leave the world with more educated and balanced adults.
EviLore
That was a good read, and I have no idea how so many left the OP and arrived at the various conclusions that they did. I feel that Twenge raises the most compelling points. Anecdotally, I have seen this effect for myself in my wife's behaviors and moods. A little bit of exposure to social media can have mixed results on one's mood, but it's the always-connected and always-available characteristic of smart phones that make this such a negative and amplified negative effect. My wife has acknowledged that getting away from her phone during normal working hours has a positive effect on her overall mood. I detected a similar pattern in myself years ago when I would browse Facebook and come away feeling disappointed that groups of friends did things without me or without even inviting me, etc., until eventually I decided I didn't need to know most of what I was seeing on the timeline.
Basically, there's no tangible benefit to knowing the things that FB tells us, and there lies the great problem with smart phones + social media. I find it bad enough that I'm even basically required to function on social media as a
sponsored athlete, but I can't fathom staying connected the same way I was when I was in college. I would probably look like the graph if I lived my entire existence through these apps and I relied on likes and views to determine my worth to the world.
This all leads me to the thought that
being always connected is a bigger part of the problem. We're all prone to over-consumption of the internet, and social media is an all-you-can-drink tray of martinis. It was nice back in the day when you could sit down in front of the computer, log on to the internet, and get updates from a friend or family member. Back then it didn't seem to be a competition for social media points. If it was, you could disconnect from it and it stayed on the internet. Being
always there makes it never go away. We hit some sort of world/internet singularity when the smart phone hit store shelves. Getting rid of smart phones won't solve the problem, but changing how we socially interact
will.
The inevitable solution will be a change in social tastes... a generation of youth who find our photos of social situations to be pitiful pleas for attention. lol "Anybody can snap a photo of a glass of wine, bro, but check out this killer code solution I put up on my feed and comment on where you think I could improve efficiency!"