Columnists, authors and anyone in the public eye have always had to navigate their ‘material’ judiciously because they’re not just our lives we’re documenting. They’re also the lives of our partners, parents, children and friends. In fact anyone who crosses paths with a writer inadvertently risks exposure. It’s a miracle I have any friends at all.
Relieved you’re not one of them? Not so fast because you also risk unwanted exposure. Everyone is trying to navigate the privacy balance and the new tightrope is social media.
‘Facebook Friction’ has been recently identified as a big issue for many couples with 95 percent of people worried about privacy according to a recent survey by Relationships Australia.
This isn’t so much about flirting with your exes on Facebook or spending too much time online – although there’s that. This is the friction caused by boundaries that aren’t in sync with someone else in your life.
Social media requires so many discretionary decisions that are far more complex than privacy settings. Photos or not? What kind and of whom? Names of partners? Children? Exes? Identifying details about where you work and live? Mentioning the property you bought? What you paid? Ate? Think? Said? How you voted? Who you slept with? The fact your girlfriend has a shocking hangover?
With all those variables, it’s virtually impossible to find two people who calibrate their social media lives exactly the same way.
Top Comments
My famiy and I regularly camp at the coast where there is no mobile phone range. For the first day I feel really anxious about being 'unavailable' or not knowing whats going on with FB, but then I relax and it doesnt even cross my mind. This is where I recall my previous life without phones/internet to discover it was a freeing heaven. Whilst campling my phone is left in my bag which only comes out every few days when we are in range (going to shops for example) and sadly I feel excited to 'see' whats going on but then feel deflated when nothing is or has.
I do enjoy FB, I never post, I like seeings everyone elses posts and I feel fascinated vs annoyed by the ones who overshare but I do find myself at times remembering to spend the 'time' to nurture the relationships that are real, current and the ones who need and like me and who will give back (ie. my children and my real life friends).
FB can be great in moderation if you can find and keep it in a good balance.
my insurance is debating wether or not to write it off. will they pay off my existing loan completely. i owe more than it is worth or will i be stuck paying the difference? i have full insurance because the car is not paid for.