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?
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a circle jerk of vacuous likes. I don't see the posts, but if I were to see you all thirsty for attention posting about going to some crap restaurant or a "vaca" when I can go to Italy and have real dining experiences, I just feel bad for you.
The first page poster nailed it-- it's pathetic. Looking for the attention and second, what you define as "fancy" or a "vacation". Ok, Olive Garden.
lol if you are so secure in your position to never have any worries like these women trying to find a bit of joy in experiences that you find so poor and pathetic….then why are you so incapable of indifference to them, never mind compassion? If you’re so high up, where did you lose your noblesse oblige
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had 2 close friends pass away and 1 I have not picture of us together, the other I have 1 because I posted it on FB.
Insta and FB help me see what my friends and family are doing... my family is very large and impossible to track... just found out my nephew moved from instagram post. I have over 25 nieces and nephews.
I enjoy seeing them and looking at them and so do my friends.
I'm not doing anything that amazing so no need to be jealous.
I also print a photo album yearly from it.
why does anybody take pictures? Why do cameras even exist?
I do all this on Shutterfly and don't need to share any of it. Shutterfly can back up all my photos and make albums. I don't need my friends, family and old coworkers to bear witness to my photo preservation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had 2 close friends pass away and 1 I have not picture of us together, the other I have 1 because I posted it on FB.
Insta and FB help me see what my friends and family are doing... my family is very large and impossible to track... just found out my nephew moved from instagram post. I have over 25 nieces and nephews.
I enjoy seeing them and looking at them and so do my friends.
I'm not doing anything that amazing so no need to be jealous.
I also print a photo album yearly from it.
why does anybody take pictures? Why do cameras even exist?
The question asked wasn’t why do people take pictures. The question asked was why does someone take a picture and post it (share it) with people who weren’t at the event.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had 2 close friends pass away and 1 I have not picture of us together, the other I have 1 because I posted it on FB.
Insta and FB help me see what my friends and family are doing... my family is very large and impossible to track... just found out my nephew moved from instagram post. I have over 25 nieces and nephews.
I enjoy seeing them and looking at them and so do my friends.
I'm not doing anything that amazing so no need to be jealous.
I also print a photo album yearly from it.
why does anybody take pictures? Why do cameras even exist?
Instagram/Facebook are not good ways to share photos with friends and family unless profiles are limited to those people. Many people's accounts are either public or they are connected to a lot more people than just friends or family, so when you post you are sending that photo to a huge community of people including colleagues, old classmates, neighbors, etc. People who don't really need that info. This is the technological equivalent of distributing your personal photos in the town square to anyone you encounter. Most of those people don't need to see those photos.
It is very easy in this day and age to share photos with just friends and family, via locked down social media accounts or simply using text. That is what many of us do in order to preserve privacy and also to prevent the kind of brag-sharing people are talking about on this thread.
If you didn't know your nephew moved until he posted about it on Instagram, you are not very close and he likely did not care if you knew.
Anonymous wrote: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 wrote: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
Why not let Google photos give you “this time last year” photo montages then? Or post the pictures with captions to a private or shared folder? Honest question. Because when I scroll FB I often see people doing as you do and they even say (cringe) “dear diary- here are some November moments for the books! I know I’ll love seeing these memories roll around next year!” Like, why make it public?
Anonymous wrote: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
Why not let Google photos give you “this time last year” photo montages then? Or post the pictures with captions to a private or shared folder? Honest question. Because when I scroll FB I often see people doing as you do and they even say (cringe) “dear diary- here are some November moments for the books! I know I’ll love seeing these memories roll around next year!” Like, why make it public?
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
Anonymous wrote:It's a circle jerk of vacuous likes. I don't see the posts, but if I were to see you all thirsty for attention posting about going to some crap restaurant or a "vaca" when I can go to Italy and have real dining experiences, I just feel bad for you.
The first page poster nailed it-- it's pathetic. Looking for the attention and second, what you define as "fancy" or a "vacation". Ok, Olive Garden.