You make lunch. It looks tasty. You take a picture. You
post it. Now you feel full. You take a selfie of yourself looking full. You post
it. Now you've got food poisoning and you're throwing up. It's pretty
impressive, bright green vomit. You take a picture, right?
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No! You don't!
Oversharing on social media, do you do it? I know I do
and am in constant danger of doing it. If you opened up my brain I wouldn't be
surprised if you found little social media sharing buttons. When I'm amused by
a thought, a twitter widget pops up with a question: Share it? When my eyes
land on some juicy image, an instagram widget flashes up: Take a picture? Don't
get me started on the hashtags #gettothepoint
Last week I went to FuerzaBruta at the Roundhouse.
It's a theatrical experience involving stunning visual effects, loud music and
lots of water. Or, as the website states it's an event 'where worlds collide, where dreams are real and reality takes a back
seat. Give in to it, let go and enjoy the spectacular ride.'
Well, here's the problem. I couldn't 'give in to it' and 'let go' because reality failed to take a back seat. Instead
reality took a front seat in the form of people holding their Smartphone's up
in the air trying to video it all. We were seeing a spectacle of flashing
lights and smoke, and there they all were trying desperately to capture it. Why?
For what? Anyone standing behind them could see their videos were pathetic. It's
like when you take snaps of fireworks, they never look as good as the real
thing.
What struck me as ridiculous is that they had come to
see a live show but were watching it through a tiny screen. Just enjoy it! I wanted to shout, Just be in the moment! What made me angry was that I had paid to
see the show and because they were holding their phones up, my view was being
cut off and the chance of me being immersed in the performance was impossible.
Trembling with rage, I did ask someone politely to lower their phone at one
point, which they did, looking surprised to find there were people behind them
at all.
I'm an advocate for social media as a creative outlet,
for business, building connections, promoting causes you care about, or just for pure
entertainment. But using social media to prove that you exist, that you have a
life, can turn you into a slave to it, forever seeking approval. Because why
else do people feel the urge to take those crappy videos, if not to get a
response, perhaps some 'likes' on Facebook, a few retweets, an OMG and an LOL? I've
experienced it myself and it does my head in. In fact I often feel a need to
reassess how I'm using my platforms.
Of one thing I'm sure, those phone adverts which tell
you to buy their phone because with its super mega camera you will 'never miss a moment' are talking rubbish.
Surely, the way you don't miss a moment is to put your phone down, be fully
present and enjoy it?