It’s a well established fact, that the
paradox of our generational contribution is definitively two fold. The
relentless progression of technology has simultaneously intensified and contributed to the ever-increasing richness and complexity of our cultural environment. As we apprehensively venture from one wifi connection to the next, our
dependency on social media has become an all consuming virtual vexation, which has sank its teeth into our physical lives. For some of us, it seems like only
yesterday sharing a bebo love was the pinnacle of our networking repetoire, yet
the giddy excitement and distraction generated by an increasing number of
gorgeous gadgets and mesmerizing social media, has expanded with each passing
year.
On a fundamental level, social media feels great. The shares. The likes. The comments. They’re fun and they can make us feel fabulous and in sync with the world. Facebook, Instagram and Twitter have ingrained themselves in society so integrally, that they have began to shape our personal and professional relationships. As we continue to feed our social media addiction; seeking and demanding more from our online interactions, our social media accounts have truly become an extension of ourselves. Nevertheless, our reliance on these tools clearly have lasting repercussions for our personal relations and society at large.
Individually we personify a
combination of genetic, inherited, and learned behaviour. These qualities can be
extremely fallible and subject to the pulls and pushes of external influence especially where youth and impressionable characters are concerned.
Fundamentally, the popularity of social media epitomises a butterfly catching crusade, which
aspires to create, maintain and promote social
acceptance amongst peers and key networking individuals. Social media is
addictive precisely because it gives us something which the real world often
lacks (or offers in short supply)!, Namely it instills immediacy, connectedness,
and a unique sense of belonging, which we all crave on multiple levels of
cognition.
Sadly, the alarming progression of social media has gathered momentum faster than humanity has been able to accrue wisdom. The peculiar predicament of the present-day surely came to pass as a consequence of an extremely questionable morality, which has existed since the beginning of time. The day we went to dig out a smart phone before we thought to outstretch a hand, was the day we sealed the fate of technology as the demonised poster child who initiated and ignited society’s ills. However, to loosely butcher an observation of Oscar Wilde: ‘Give a man a mask and he will show you his true self’. A startling surveillance made long before social media was even a twinkle in the cyber sky. Trolling, spamming and down right despicable behaviour is never more than a newsfeed away. Yik yak, for example; (the anonymous social media app) recently gained notoriety as an online bullying forum, verifying Wilde’s assertion regarding the futile faculty of man. The proposition of this blog therefore lies not in the castigation of social media but in the ousting of the most villainous of victims. Ourselves.
Social media itself was not designed
to deal with passive aggression and discontent, nor was it intended to be
exploited by abdominal advertisers and cyber conspirators, who have profited
from an opportunity to cash in on our trivial and tumultuous fortitude. Perhaps
as Aldous Huxley lamented, technology has merely facilitated a more efficient
means of going backwards. Nevertheless, it’s here to stay and it’s procreation
is only going to continue to strengthen and solidify our respective cultures.

Alternatively, the potential surrounding social media to act as a
positive social tool is infinite. You could fill a black hole with all
the wonderful things you can find on-line. Beyond the one dimentional promotion
of self interests, commerce and general cynical ignorance, social media can
help us grow by purposefully contributing to our personal connections and our
academic and emotional learning. Beyond the doom and gloom, tutts and the but's of heated debate; the collective big
mouth of social media has arguably put the collective ‘big man’ in his place.
Many small businesses have prospered from social media engagement which serves
as the materialisation of an effective and inexpensive way to grow their
business. Online word of mouth (or eWOW) is affecting purchasing power to the
extent that social media has vapourised traditional business and communication
models. This has resulted in the very visible rise of the blogger phenomenon amongst
other things in the search of an interactive authenticity.

En route to Amsterdam With Love.
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