Social media is making it easier for people to fall prey to Munchausen syndrome – where people concoct an illness and then bask in the glow of the sympathy of others.
Last week, Belle Gibson was a social media star. She was the vivacious young woman who had beaten cancer with little more than a healthy diet and a positive attitude. She had just partnered with mega-brand Apple, to have her Whole Pantry app included on their new watch. Her book was about to hit the shelves in the UK and the US.
She was, it seemed, on the precipice of a global healthy living empire, with carefully curated social media pages that reflected her truth: she was a cancer survivor who beat the dire predictions of conventional medicine and she was a hero to her 200,000 social media followers.
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I'm not sure Belle really has Munchausens. When you break it down, all that she really did was lie for money. The 22 year old from the Gold Coast appears to be more of a genuine case, having poisoned her child and undergone surgery for the removal of her own appendix unnecessarily, all for attention not profit. Her actions seem much more compulsive than Belle's who, in my opinion, comes across as a pathological liar and 100% narcissistic.
Just watch, all the glowing comments are from the named people who faked their problems online.