Anonymous wrote:Same OP. I think quitting FB was the best choice for my mental health but I definitely feel disconnected from people. In particular, it means I’ve totally lost touch with people from my past— high school friends, old colleagues, etc.
But I don’t even maintain a FB account for marketplace or groups. I know if I did, I would wind up using it to look people up and get sucked in somehow. That’s why I quit— it was a time suck and made me too focused on what other people were up to, instead of just minding my own business.
There’s plenty of toxicity here to cause harm.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re on DCUM, you’re on social media. It’s anonymous, without the image sharing, and with a different purpose than sharing life updates/making friends, but you’re still interacting with people online.
If you read NYTimes and comment on the articles, you interact with people online. That's not where the harm of social media is.
Anonymous wrote:I have never had FB. I am sure I miss some pictures. My sister will update me on that girl who lived down the street growing up that was 2 years ahead of us in school...that I don't even remember
I guess I don't know what else I am missing.
Anonymous wrote:I have an account on LinkedIn, but I never post and almost never read either. It’s basically just an online resume and professional Rolodex for me. Never joined Facebook or twitter or anything else.
Anonymous wrote:Get a group chat going with some friends. That’s what people are doing now that FB is dead (and IG too).
Anonymous wrote:If you’re on DCUM, you’re on social media. It’s anonymous, without the image sharing, and with a different purpose than sharing life updates/making friends, but you’re still interacting with people online.
Anonymous wrote:I have social media. I do have one friend who is off of it and I feel like she is cut off from a lot. She doesn't know what's happening in the schools (I'm guessing she's also not on dcum!) and she has zero contact with her old friends. Maybe she's happier that way, but I'm surprised sometimes about what she doesn't know about our community.