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Opinion

Even rabbis are insecure when on social media

Being deprived of real-life interaction during lockdown has made social media more toxic

May 4, 2021 09:48
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3 min read

The so-called “highlight reel” effect of social media has been around for a while. Basically, it works like this. The millions of micro bloggers now out there tend to only post carefully curated images and videos of themselves — the “highlights” of their lives. Who would want to boast about failures rather than successes? The “effect”, or problem, with this is that through regularly absorbing and watching these incredible individuals and their stories, people begin to feel more and more inadequate about their own lives.

This is particularly the case with teenagers and young adults. Evidence increasingly shows that the consistent viewing of flawless images, particularly on teen-favoured platforms such as Instagram, drives negative social contrasts with perceived failings in their own lives.

So far, so well-known. But the pandemic has vastly accelerated this process. It has created a toxic mix which directly threatens the mental health, confidence and stability of our teens — and adults — to a far greater extent than anything we have seen previously.

Reflecting on an experience at the start of the pandemic helped me understand how this has happened.