How to Be Online and Also Be Happy by Issy Beech
Author:Issy Beech [Issy Beech]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Hardie Grant Books
Published: 2021-10-29T00:00:00+00:00
Donât let it break you (if you can help it)
Very much interwoven into the fabric of being online is having an opinion; feeling like you either need to add your thoughts and feelings to the discussion, or echo the thoughts and feelings of those you respect. The size and speed of posting and news online has meant that forming an opinion about something has become less about being thoughtful or educated, and more about being the most right, the most quickly. Having the Most Perfect Opinion. While forming an opinion about something usually requires having a grasp of the concept and a varied list of sources, online it generally only calls for an active account. We see something, we think, we post. Repeat. This phenomenon sucks, for lots of reasons. Itâs too loud, too much, too obnoxious, too competitive. And it often means the opinions about a topic drown out the original topic, so that nothing really ever sinks in, or no conversation is ever led to its logical end. It also begins to feel like one of the principle exhilarations of the early internet â posting wildly because life was chaos â is a long-dead pipe dream. Being convinced we know everything (just because weâre online and we read stuff) doesnât just make us insufferable and obnoxious. It also leads to us being constantly wrong, and feeling attacked when weâre corrected, or mocked for it.
If youâre hoping, expecting or planning to live a life on the internet where youâre constantly adored, get out now. Log off and become the North Pond Hermit because if youâre posting, youâre going to do things that people absolutely hate. Not because thereâs anything necessarily wrong with you, but because itâs How It Is. When youâre sharing your point of view with the world, thereâs always going to be somebody who wants to scream about it. If youâre unlucky enough, you may even find your point of view being shared and mocked with virality, jeered at by possibly tens of thousands (though weâre more likely to be one of the tens of thousands, arenât we?). This is unavoidable because the internet has empowered us all to dust off a wooden box, stand on it and shout our silly little opinions at anyone whoâll listen. And sometimes, those opinions are insane. Weâre all going to end up in conversations where weâre out of our depth, and asked questions we donât know the answers to, and weâre going to answer them because we want to sound smart or like we care about stuff. And weâre all almost certainly going to say some things that are misinformed or insensitive or just plain foolish. Or, because itâs the internet, you might say something as regular as âElmo seems niceâ and wake up one morning to find youâve lit a fire of rage inside of strangers all over the world, inspiring Buzzfeed polls and podcast episodes and think pieces in The Guardian. However it happens, you will, at some time, go online and be told youâre âwrongâ, âstupidâ and have âworms for brainsâ.
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