Anonymous wrote:Social media is far more toxic than we acknowledge.
Anonymous wrote:Wife is great, but is just always on Insta. She doesn't post excessively, doesn't overshare, but just constantly habitually scrolling and consuming sort of brainless stuff. I had to get rid of the app because I found myself doing the same stuff, and realized I was just wasting a lot of time on stuff that was really meaningless to me coming from people I didn't know... but if she wants to stay on the app, that's fine. But it's getting to the point where she just takes it out and starts scrolling when sitting watching TV with the kids or just having casual chat. I realize it's obnoxious to talk about "being present" but she's really not being very present.
Thoughts on non-passive aggressive and non-insulting ways to broach this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Social media is far more toxic than we acknowledge.
I think the problem is that people who don't have a toxic relationship with SM (aren't addicted, don't have jealousy issues, it doesn't make them feel bad about themselves, etc) just don't get why adults let SM get to them so much.
Anonymous wrote:Social media is far more toxic than we acknowledge.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand why you cannot be blunt. My husband is on his phone too much. I’m just like “you need to put your phone away for two hours and hang out with us.” And my daughter (sort of jokingly) will sometimes wrestle it out of his hands and hide it. I would be like “listen, you are on instagram way too much and not interacting with me and the kids. We need time with you when you are not on your phone.”
I don’t understand why you would tiptoe around this. If my husband went from not drinking at our house to suddenly having two beers every night, I would just say “what in the world is going on?” And tell him it was not healthy and I didn’t want it in the house. I’m pretty sure he would say something like that to me.