Why do grown women post photos of social events?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Those reasons and probably several others.

It's pathetic. Whatever.


+1 and it seems like most people have woken up and realized how stupid it is.


I have noticed this too. It's great.


Imagine being so miserable and pathetic that a picture of your friends having a good time bothers you this much. Are you jealous?


DP. It is perfectly normal to feel jealous or left out when presented with a photo of people from your community having fun together. It need not be a particularly intense feeling and most people move on from it easily, but it's a normal and human response because humans are social creatures whose security is dependent on belonging in a community. A photo like that is likely to prompt a temporary (and primal) fear that the individual may not be securely part of the group. Most people will remember that, actually, they are securely part of the community via other means and move on. But that initial pang of jealousy or, more accurately, fear, is pretty common and normal. If someone cannot move on, it may be because they do not have secure belonging in a community, in which case their fear is real and understandable, not something to be criticized and derided.

The greater question is what compels people to post such photos to public feeds? I believe it is related to the same fear. People post these photos as a way of asserting their belonging in the community. They may be particularly compelled to post photos that show them in high status settings or with high status people, as a self-protective way of showing how embedded they are. In this case, posting the photo is actually done, on some level, to provoke jealous and fear from people who may be further from the inside, high status parts of the community. Thus the feeling of jealous/fear that many people feel when seeing these photos is actually the intended effect the poster hopes it to have.

Your choice of the words "miserable" and "pathetic" -- exclusionary words that emphasize the low and outsider status of the person to whom you are talking -- indicate that this is a behavior you participate in and that it is very much about asserting your belonging over that of others when you do so.


Too. Many. Words. Wut.


Some ideas require explanation. This is a serious conversation, there is some nuance.


especially when i can use a chat bot, amirite


I wrote my entire post myself, no chat bot. You don't have to read it if you don't want to. But I will point out that my entire post is on the exact topic of this thread and actually contributes to the conversation OP started. Whereas snide remarks making fun of my post just derail the whole thing.
Anonymous
I used to do this and have stopped. I generally will ask myself before posting, "Who is the audience for this/why am I posting this?"

Sometimes there is a good reason. But often it is unnecessary and potential hurtful to people who were not included in the gathering for whatever reason.

I used to be a part of a group of women (grew apart due to geography) where posts like this caused so much drama over who was or wasn't included, why so and so posts about outings with Larla but not Linda, etc. And as a PP said, it becomes a circle jerk or likes or reposts. It was toxic and not behavior that 30-40 something women should be modeling for their own kids.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Because some of us use Facebook as our diaries and photo albums. That is all. Judge away: it’s not going to change. I love the convenience


So your " dear diary " entries are "dear mark suckerberg" ?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I used to do this and have stopped. I generally will ask myself before posting, "Who is the audience for this/why am I posting this?"

Sometimes there is a good reason. But often it is unnecessary and potential hurtful to people who were not included in the gathering for whatever reason.

I used to be a part of a group of women (grew apart due to geography) where posts like this caused so much drama over who was or wasn't included, why so and so posts about outings with Larla but not Linda, etc. And as a PP said, it becomes a circle jerk or likes or reposts. It was toxic and not behavior that 30-40 something women should be modeling for their own kids.


This is a mature and thoughtful approach. I also used to do this and had a similar experience -- was in a social group connected to my job and the social media posts became very hurtful/exclusionary/political because people became competitive about how was socializing with people in positions of authority at work. It was very toxic.

My kid isn't on social media yet and may never be (things keep changing in terms of what technology kids are interested in using) but I agree we have a responsibility to our kids to teach them how to use these resources maturely and kindly. It is embarrassing to me the way I used to behave on social media, well into my 30s, but it was a new technology and just didn't understand what was wrong with what I was doing at the time. Now I do. Hopefully my daughter can benefit from my hard-earned wisdom and do better.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I used to do this and have stopped. I generally will ask myself before posting, "Who is the audience for this/why am I posting this?"

Sometimes there is a good reason. But often it is unnecessary and potential hurtful to people who were not included in the gathering for whatever reason.

I used to be a part of a group of women (grew apart due to geography) where posts like this caused so much drama over who was or wasn't included, why so and so posts about outings with Larla but not Linda, etc. And as a PP said, it becomes a circle jerk or likes or reposts. It was toxic and not behavior that 30-40 something women should be modeling for their own kids.


This! I stopped posting on social media four years ago and this is what did it it. Ask yourself, who is this really for?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to do this and have stopped. I generally will ask myself before posting, "Who is the audience for this/why am I posting this?"

Sometimes there is a good reason. But often it is unnecessary and potential hurtful to people who were not included in the gathering for whatever reason.

I used to be a part of a group of women (grew apart due to geography) where posts like this caused so much drama over who was or wasn't included, why so and so posts about outings with Larla but not Linda, etc. And as a PP said, it becomes a circle jerk or likes or reposts. It was toxic and not behavior that 30-40 something women should be modeling for their own kids.


This! I stopped posting on social media four years ago and this is what did it it. Ask yourself, who is this really for?


+a million

If you are really honest with yourself, the answer is often something petty like "my ex boyfriend" or "that coworker who thinks she's soooo much better than me." If it's really just for the people in the photo, there are other ways to share -- I always really enjoy the day after text threads with friends when we share photos or thank you for the host/organizer after getting together, and when it happens in a private text thread it feels more authentic than splashing it on social media where a bunch of random people will see it.

Being just generally more private has been so much better for my mental health, and if it also means that someone out there isn't looking at my post and thinking "I guess I wasn't invited because they don't like me" well that's an added benefit. Probably that person wasn't invited because we just don't know them that well, but I don't want them sitting around feeling bad about it either! I've watched my kid work through exclusion and other friend stuff in elementary at this point and realize how hard it is. I don't want to cause other people pain.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It's the only time I'm dressed up and it's nice to have pictures with my friends?


you still have the pictures if you don't insecurely broadcast them lol.


Are these women secret agents?
Anonymous
Feel like you’re overthinking this OP? I’m not on social at all but often when I’m out people want to take a group pic or whatever. If it makes them happy, fine!
Anonymous
Definitely not an authentic desire to share joy in my opinion.

Likely a need to stroke envy. ✨
Anonymous
I don’t know. I had a group of women friends I had a lot of fun with. After my divorce I moved 30 min away and even though I’m available I don’t get invited out anymore, even though we’re technically still friends, no drama or anything. So when they post these group photos to things without me I feel FOMO and left out. I don’t say anything.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Those reasons and probably several others.

It's pathetic. Whatever.


+1 and it seems like most people have woken up and realized how stupid it is.


I have noticed this too. It's great.


Imagine being so miserable and pathetic that a picture of your friends having a good time bothers you this much. Are you jealous?


DP. It is perfectly normal to feel jealous or left out when presented with a photo of people from your community having fun together. It need not be a particularly intense feeling and most people move on from it easily, but it's a normal and human response because humans are social creatures whose security is dependent on belonging in a community. A photo like that is likely to prompt a temporary (and primal) fear that the individual may not be securely part of the group. Most people will remember that, actually, they are securely part of the community via other means and move on. But that initial pang of jealousy or, more accurately, fear, is pretty common and normal. If someone cannot move on, it may be because they do not have secure belonging in a community, in which case their fear is real and understandable, not something to be criticized and derided.

The greater question is what compels people to post such photos to public feeds? I believe it is related to the same fear. People post these photos as a way of asserting their belonging in the community. They may be particularly compelled to post photos that show them in high status settings or with high status people, as a self-protective way of showing how embedded they are. In this case, posting the photo is actually done, on some level, to provoke jealous and fear from people who may be further from the inside, high status parts of the community. Thus the feeling of jealous/fear that many people feel when seeing these photos is actually the intended effect the poster hopes it to have.

Your choice of the words "miserable" and "pathetic" -- exclusionary words that emphasize the low and outsider status of the person to whom you are talking -- indicate that this is a behavior you participate in and that it is very much about asserting your belonging over that of others when you do so.


Oh boy, that is a whole lot of BS. I am not the one who posted this thread or wondering why other people socialize and feel the need to share they are having a good time. I don't share almost anything on facebook but if I see a collage of photos from one of my friends enjoying herself and having a good time, my first thought is NOT "what is wrong with her." Quite the opposite. I think, "hey, good for her. She looks happy." If you feel jealous and excluded, then you need to work on that. Work on being a better friend, colleague, person instead of expecting the world to be miserable WITH you.


I wasn't describing my personal experience. I'm explaining why it is common for people to feel left out or jealous when they see photos like this. Essentially I'm explaining why social media often has a negative impact on some people. And the people who are least socially connected are most vulnerable, because their exposure to social media is most likely to most accurately reflect their real experience of isolation and exclusion. It can also feel humiliating for them because it publicizes their outsider status. Without social media, people might vaguely be aware that one family is never included in neighborhood get togethers, or that some high school seniors aren't included in end of year parties. But with social media, the people who are on the fringes of groups or rarely or never included in social outings have a visual representation of their exclusion. It can be very painful and fear inducing.

Loneliness, isolation, and lacking a sense of belonging are some of the most critical mental health problems in our society. Many of the broader problems we have right now can be traced to people who feel this way.

So I am trying to encourage those of you who don't feel this way to be less defensive about how you use social media and instead think about why it might be very difficult or harmful for people who lack the social connectedness you enjoy. And rather than say derisively to someone in this position "you sound jealous" or "work on being a better friend," to consider that there may be small things we can all do to ease some of the negative impacts. For instance, instead of posting photos of an outing with friends to a social media account where it will be seen by many people who are not part of your inner circle of friends, you could instead simply text those photos to the friends who were there. That is what I do. I seek to make any public social media account I have inclusive and friendly, rather than contributing to a culture where I advertise my own social bonds in a way that could trigger people who lack similar bonds.

I would also look inward and ask yourself why you feel comfortable using the language you do to defend your own behavior, language that is clearly intended to make the recipient feel bad about their social position, lack of friends or familial connections, etc. Calling people miserable and jealous as an insult is strange because if someone is miserable, that is something to be concerned about, not thrown as an epithet. If someone is jealous of the social bonds other people have, they are likely lonely and in need of more society, and that should not be thrown at them as an insult. If you are fortunate enough to have life full of connection and inclusion, I do not understand why you would be hostile to someone who doesn't have that.


Why should i read your diatribe when you clearly didn't read mine? I dont need to look inward but clearly you do.


The tome poster (posters)? is something else.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I sometimes feel the same knee-jerk reaction when I see these types of posts, OP, but I also ask myself, what is an appropriate use of "social" media? What are people allowed to share?


Before "social media", only "Society" people issued public press releases about their social life. Everyone else shared information with people who had a relevant interest.
Anonymous
OP, get off social media. I dropped it years ago when I realized it was making me hate people that I like in real life. And I was getting sucked into other people’s everyday drama that I didn’t need in my life. I don’t miss it at all. And I have more to talk to people about in real life when I see them now that I haven’t already seen all of their vacation pics on insta.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Those reasons and probably several others.

It's pathetic. Whatever.


+1 and it seems like most people have woken up and realized how stupid it is.


I have noticed this too. It's great.


Imagine being so miserable and pathetic that a picture of your friends having a good time bothers you this much. Are you jealous?


DP. It is perfectly normal to feel jealous or left out when presented with a photo of people from your community having fun together. It need not be a particularly intense feeling and most people move on from it easily, but it's a normal and human response because humans are social creatures whose security is dependent on belonging in a community. A photo like that is likely to prompt a temporary (and primal) fear that the individual may not be securely part of the group. Most people will remember that, actually, they are securely part of the community via other means and move on. But that initial pang of jealousy or, more accurately, fear, is pretty common and normal. If someone cannot move on, it may be because they do not have secure belonging in a community, in which case their fear is real and understandable, not something to be criticized and derided.

The greater question is what compels people to post such photos to public feeds? I believe it is related to the same fear. People post these photos as a way of asserting their belonging in the community. They may be particularly compelled to post photos that show them in high status settings or with high status people, as a self-protective way of showing how embedded they are. In this case, posting the photo is actually done, on some level, to provoke jealous and fear from people who may be further from the inside, high status parts of the community. Thus the feeling of jealous/fear that many people feel when seeing these photos is actually the intended effect the poster hopes it to have.

Your choice of the words "miserable" and "pathetic" -- exclusionary words that emphasize the low and outsider status of the person to whom you are talking -- indicate that this is a behavior you participate in and that it is very much about asserting your belonging over that of others when you do so.


Too. Many. Words. Wut.


Some ideas require explanation. This is a serious conversation, there is some nuance.


Not really. Adults are allowed to use social media as they please. Ignore if you don’t like it.
~~DP
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Those reasons and probably several others.

It's pathetic. Whatever.


+1 and it seems like most people have woken up and realized how stupid it is.


I have noticed this too. It's great.


Imagine being so miserable and pathetic that a picture of your friends having a good time bothers you this much. Are you jealous?


DP. It is perfectly normal to feel jealous or left out when presented with a photo of people from your community having fun together. It need not be a particularly intense feeling and most people move on from it easily, but it's a normal and human response because humans are social creatures whose security is dependent on belonging in a community. A photo like that is likely to prompt a temporary (and primal) fear that the individual may not be securely part of the group. Most people will remember that, actually, they are securely part of the community via other means and move on. But that initial pang of jealousy or, more accurately, fear, is pretty common and normal. If someone cannot move on, it may be because they do not have secure belonging in a community, in which case their fear is real and understandable, not something to be criticized and derided.

The greater question is what compels people to post such photos to public feeds? I believe it is related to the same fear. People post these photos as a way of asserting their belonging in the community. They may be particularly compelled to post photos that show them in high status settings or with high status people, as a self-protective way of showing how embedded they are. In this case, posting the photo is actually done, on some level, to provoke jealous and fear from people who may be further from the inside, high status parts of the community. Thus the feeling of jealous/fear that many people feel when seeing these photos is actually the intended effect the poster hopes it to have.

Your choice of the words "miserable" and "pathetic" -- exclusionary words that emphasize the low and outsider status of the person to whom you are talking -- indicate that this is a behavior you participate in and that it is very much about asserting your belonging over that of others when you do so.


Too. Many. Words. Wut.


Some ideas require explanation. This is a serious conversation, there is some nuance.


Not really. Adults are allowed to use social media as they please. Ignore if you don’t like it.
~~DP


We don’t have to ignore it, we are “allowed” to discuss it.
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