We often consume edited and fictional content unknowingly on social media. We forget that people can simply make things up and present it as truth. "When I see a fellow fitness influencer post a picture of their fit, slender body, I assume that’s what their body actually looks like." Social media has exposed the fragility of truth. What is clear is that this misinformation is harmful to its users—particularly the ones most vulnerable, children and adolescents.
Yes, certainly no surprise! It is well worth remembering that so much of what we see online is really fake, but the bottom line is fake positivity gets followers and views, whilst honesty about sadness and depression generally does not. Anyway, exposing your sadness and depression online could actually cause more problems and issues for an individual, and we've even seen individuals
committing suicide over replies and comments sent to them.
So if you're a parent, it is probably worth sharing the linked article below with your kids.
See
I’m an Influencer, and I Think Social Media Is Toxic#
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fakeThere are more kinds of lies than photoshopped abs (though there are plenty of those, too).