Pūtahi Hauora
Defence Health HubIs social media hurting your mental health?
Is Social Media Hurting Your Mental Health?
00:00
Translator: MARIA TIAKA Reviewer: Peter van de Ven
00:10
I'm fat.
00:13
Wow, I'm fat.
00:15
She's only nineteen years old, what am I doing with my life?
00:19
Hey! Two likes! Nice.
00:21
Do I like this photo?
00:24
Does she really need more likes?
00:26
I hope I'm going to be invited to the wedding.
00:29
One more like, nice!
00:31
Welcome to the internal monologue of a typical social media scroll.
00:36
A monologue that so many of us have every day,
00:39
but we don't think about it, we don't talk about it.
00:42
In fact, many of us can't even recognize it happening.
00:46
I'm Bailey Parnell,
00:48
and I will discuss the unintended consequences
00:50
social media is having on your mental health.
00:53
I will show you what's stressing you out every day,
00:55
what it's doing to you,
00:56
and how you can craft a better experience for yourself online.
01:02
Just over a year ago,
01:03
my sister and I took a four-day vacation to Jasper, Alberta.
01:08
This was the first no-work vacation I had taken in four years.
01:12
On this vacation, I was going dark.
01:16
I was turning on airplane mode, no email and no social media.
01:21
The first day there,
01:22
I was still experiencing phantom vibration syndrome.
01:25
That's where you think your phone went off,
01:27
and you check and it didn't.
01:29
I was checking incessantly.
01:30
I was distracted in conversation.
01:32
I was seeing these gorgeous sights Jasper had to offer,
01:35
and my first reaction was to take out my phone
01:37
and post it on social.
01:39
But of course it wasn't there.
01:42
The second day was a little bit easier.
01:44
You might be thinking I'm ridiculous,
01:46
but I hadn't been completely disconnected in over four years.
01:50
This was practically a new experience again.
01:53
It wasn't until the fourth day I was there
01:55
that I was finally comfortable without my phone.
01:58
I was sitting with my sister, literally on the side of this mountain,
02:01
when I started thinking to myself:
02:03
"What is social media doing to me?
02:05
What is it doing to my peers?"
02:07
That was only four days, and it was anxiety-inducing,
02:10
it was stressful and it resulted in withdrawals.
02:14
That's when I started to ask questions
02:17
and have since started my master's research into this subject.
02:21
I've worked in social marketing primarily in higher education
02:24
for most of my career.
02:26
That means I work with a lot of 18- to 24-year-olds,
02:30
which also happens to be
02:31
the most active demographic on social media.
02:34
The other thing you need to know about me
02:36
is that I'm young enough to have grown up with social media,
02:40
but just old enough to be able to critically engage with it
02:42
in a way that twelve-year-old me probably couldn't.
02:45
My life is social media: personally, professionally and academically.
02:49
If it was doing this to me, what was it doing to everyone else?
02:55
I immediately found out I wasn't alone.
02:59
The center for collegiate mental health found that the top three diagnoses
03:03
on University campuses are anxiety, depression and stress.
03:08
Numerous studies from the US, Canada, the UK, you name it,
03:11
have linked this high social media use
03:14
with these high levels of anxiety and depression.
03:17
But the scary thing is that high social media use
03:20
is almost everyone I know:
03:22
my friends, my family, my colleagues.
03:25
90% of 18- to 29-year-olds are on social media.
03:31
We spend on average two hours a day there.
03:34
We don't even eat for two hours a day.
03:37
70% of the Canadian population is on social media.
03:42
Our voter turnout isn't even 70%.
03:45
Anything we do this often is worthy of critical observation.
03:49
Anything we spend this much time doing has lasting effects on us.
03:54
So let me introduce you
03:56
to four of the most common stressors on social media,
03:59
that if go unchecked
04:00
have potential to become full-blown mental health issues,
04:03
and this is by no means an exhaustive list.
04:07
Number one: the Highlight Reel.
04:11
Just like in sports,
04:12
the highlight reel is a collection of the best and brightest moments.
04:16
Social media is our personal highlight reel.
04:19
It's where we put up our wins, or when we look great,
04:21
or when we are out with friends and family.
04:24
But we struggle with insecurity
04:25
because we compare our behind-the-scenes
04:28
with everyone else's highlight reels.
04:30
We are constantly comparing ourselves to others.
04:33
Yes, this was happening before social media,
04:35
with TV and celebrity,
04:37
but now it's happening all the time, and it's directly linked to you.
04:42
A perfect example I came across in preparation for this talk
04:45
is my friend on vacation: 'brb, nap ...'
04:48
(Laughter)
04:50
'Wait, why can't I afford a vacation?
04:53
Why am I just sitting here in my PJ's watching Netflix?
04:56
I want to be on a beach.'
04:58
Here's the thing, I know her very well.
05:01
I knew this was out of the ordinary for her.
05:04
I knew she was typically drowning in schoolwork.
05:06
But we think, 'Who wants to see that?'
05:09
The highlights are what people want to see.
05:11
In fact, when your highlights do well,
05:13
you encounter the second stressor on social media.
05:16
Which is number two: Social Currency.
05:21
Just like the dollar, a currency is literally something we use
05:26
to attribute value to a good or service.
05:29
In social media, these likes, the comments, the shares
05:31
have become this form of social currency by which we attribute value to something.
05:36
In marketing, we call it the 'Economy of Attention'.
05:39
Everything is competing for your attention,
05:41
and when you give something a like or a piece of that finite attention,
05:45
it becomes a recorded transaction attributing value.
05:48
Which is great if you are selling albums or clothing.
05:52
The problem is that in our social media,
05:55
[WE are the product.]
05:57
We are letting others attribute value to us.
06:00
You know someone or are someone that has taken down a photo
06:03
because it didn't take as many likes as you thought it would.
06:07
I'll admit, I've been right there with you.
06:09
We took our product off the shelf because it wasn't selling fast enough.
06:15
This is changing our sense of identity.
06:17
We are tying up our self-worth of what others think about us
06:20
and then we are quantifying it for everyone to see.
06:23
And we are obsessed.
06:25
We have to get that selfie just right, and we will take 300 photos to make sure.
06:30
Then we will wait for the perfect time to post.
06:35
We are so obsessed
06:36
we have biological responses when we can't participate.
06:40
Which leads me to the third stressor on social media.
06:43
Number three: F.O.M.O.
06:46
It's a light phrase we've all thrown around.
06:49
F.O.M.O., or the 'fear of missing out', is an actual social anxiety
06:53
from the fear that you are missing a potential connection,
06:56
event, or opportunity.
06:58
A collection of Canadian Universities found that 7/10 students
07:02
said they would get rid of their social networking accounts
07:05
if it were not for fear of being left 'out of the loop'.
07:08
Out of curiosity, how many people here
07:10
have, or have considered deactivating your social.
07:14
That's almost everyone.
07:17
That F.O.M.O. you feel, the highlight reels, the social currency,
07:21
those are all results of a relatively 'normal' social media experience.
07:26
But what if going on social every day was a terrifying experience?
07:30
Where you not just question your self-worth
07:32
but you question your safety?
07:34
Perhaps the worst stressor on social media is number four:
07:37
Online Harassment.
07:40
40% of online adults have experienced online harassment.
07:45
73% have witnessed it.
07:48
The unfortunate reality is that it is much worse and much more likely
07:52
if you are a woman, LGBTQ, a person of color, muslim -
07:55
I think you get the point.
07:58
The problem is that in the news we are seeing these big stories:
08:02
The 18-year-old Tyler Clementi,
08:04
who took his life after his roommate secretly filmed him kissing another guy
08:08
and outed him on Twitter.
08:10
We see women like Anita Sarkeesian being close to shamed of the internet
08:14
and sent death and rape threats for sharing their feminism.
08:17
We see these stories once it is too late.
08:21
What about the everyday online harassment?
08:23
What about that ugly snapchat you sent your friend
08:26
with the intention of it being private, and now it is up on Facebook?
08:29
'And so? It's just one photo, it's funny.'
08:32
'Just one mean comment, not a big deal.'
08:35
But when these micro moments happen over and over again, over time,
08:40
that's when we have a macro problem.
08:43
We have to recognize these everyday instances as well.
08:46
Because if they go unchecked and the effects unnoticed,
08:49
we are going to have many more Tyler Clementis.
08:54
The effects are not always easy to recognise.
08:56
How many of you have noticed the notifications at the top of my screen?
09:00
How many of you, like me, are bothered that they're not checked?
09:04
Ok, let me check them for you. (Sighs) Okay!
09:10
Just one small example of what this can do to you.
09:13
Maybe you simply cannot focus because your notifications
09:16
are going off the handle, and you need to check.
09:20
That need, eventually becomes addiction.
09:24
Regarding social media, we are already experiencing
09:26
impairment similar to substance dependencies.
09:29
With every like, you get a shot of that feel-good chemical, dopamine.
09:33
You gain more of that social currency. So what do we do to feel good?
09:37
We check likes - just one more time.
09:41
We post - just one more time.
09:44
We are anxious if we do not have access.
09:47
Doesn't that sound like every drug you have ever heard of?
09:50
Yeah!
09:52
So when that grows,
09:54
when your social media use goes unconfronted overtime,
09:56
that's when we see the rising levels of anxiety and depression:
09:59
the F.O.M.O. the distractions, the highlight reels, the comparisons;
10:03
It's a lot, and it's all the time!
10:06
The Canadian Association of Mental Health
10:09
found that grades 7-12 students who spent two hours a day on social media
10:14
reported higher levels of anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts.
10:19
For those of you doing the math, that's as young as twelve years old.
10:26
Here is the thing, I like social media. I do, I love it.
10:31
Hearing what I've said today
10:32
might make you think I want you to get off of it.
10:35
But I don't.
10:36
I don't think it's going anywhere,
10:38
so I'm not going to waste my time
10:39
telling you to spend less time on social media.
10:42
Frankly, I don't think absence is an option anymore.
10:45
But that does not mean you can't practice 'safe social'.
10:51
Everything I have talked about today
10:54
has nothing and everything to do with social media.
10:58
I mean, social media is neither good nor bad.
11:01
It's just the most recent tool we use to do what we have always done:
11:05
tell stories and communicate with each other.
11:08
You wouldn't blame Samsung Television for a bad TV show.
11:12
Twitter doesn't make people write hateful posts.
11:16
When we talk about this dark side of social media,
11:18
what we really talk about is the dark side of people.
11:21
That dark side that makes harassers harass;
11:23
that insecurity that makes you take down a photo
11:25
you were excited to share.
11:27
That dark side that looks at a picture of a happy family and wonders
11:30
why yours does not look like that.
11:33
So as parents, as educators, as friends, as bosses
11:38
this dark side is what we need to focus on.
11:41
We need preventative strategies and coping strategies
11:45
so that when you have your low days - because you will -
11:48
when you're questioning your self-worth, you never get as low as Tyler Clementi -
11:52
and the many others like him.
11:55
'OK, Bailey, how do you find social media wellness?'
11:59
Here's the good news:
12:00
Recognising a problem is the first step to fixing it.
12:04
So hearing this talk is just that, step one: recognise the problem.
12:08
You know the power of suggestion,
12:09
when someone tells you about something and you start seeing it everywhere.
12:13
That's why awareness is critical.
12:15
Because now you will at least be better able to recognise these effects
12:18
if and when they happen to you.
12:22
The second thing you are going to do is audit your social media diet.
12:27
The same way we monitor what goes into our mouth,
12:30
monitor whatever goes into your head and heart.
12:32
Ask yourself: 'Did that Facebook scroll make me feel better or worse off?'
12:37
'How many times do I actually check likes?'
12:40
'Why am I responding this way to that photo?'
12:43
Then ask yourself if you are happy with the results.
12:45
You might be and that's OK!
12:48
But if you're not, move on to step three.
12:51
Create a better online experience.
12:54
After my partner did his audit,
12:56
he realised his self-worth was too tied up in social media,
12:59
but particularly celebrities reminding him of the things he didn't have.
13:03
So he unfollowed all brands and all celebrities.
13:06
That worked for him.
13:08
But it might not be celebrities for you.
13:10
For me, I had to purge other people off my timeline.
13:13
Let me tell you a secret.
13:14
You do not have to follow your 'friends'.
13:17
The truth is that sometimes our friends,
13:19
or the people we have on Facebook as a courtesy,
13:23
they just suck online!
13:24
You find yourself in this passive-aggressive status war
13:27
you didn't even know was happening.
13:29
Or you are looking at 50 photos of the same concert from the same angle.
13:33
(Laughter)
13:35
If you want to follow artists, or comedians, or cats,
13:39
you can do that.
13:41
The last thing you will do is model good behaviour.
13:43
Offline we are taught not to bully other kids in the playground.
13:46
We are taught to respect others and treat them how they deserve.
13:49
We are taught not to kick others when they are down,
13:52
or take pleasure in their downfalls.
13:54
Social media is a tool.
13:55
A tool that can be used for good, for more positive groups,
13:59
for revolutions, for putting grumpy cat in Disney movies.
14:03
(Laughs)
14:04
Internet is a weird place.
14:07
Is social media hurting your mental health?
14:09
The answer is: it doesn't have to.
14:11
Social can tear you down, yes, or it can lift you up,
14:15
where you leave feeling better off, or have an actual laugh-out-loud.
14:20
Finally, I have 24 hours in a day,
14:22
if I spend two of those hours on social media,
14:25
then I want my experiences to be full of inspiration, laughs, motivation,
14:29
and a whole lot of grumpy cat in Disney movies.
14:33
Thank you.
14:34
(Applause)
Translator: MARIA TIAKA Reviewer: Peter van de Ven
00:10
I'm fat.
00:13
Wow, I'm fat.
00:15
She's only nineteen years old, what am I doing with my life?
00:19
Hey! Two likes! Nice.
00:21
Do I like this photo?
00:24
Does she really need more likes?
00:26
I hope I'm going to be invited to the wedding.
00:29
One more like, nice!
00:31
Welcome to the internal monologue of a typical social media scroll.
00:36
A monologue that so many of us have every day,
00:39
but we don't think about it, we don't talk about it.
00:42
In fact, many of us can't even recognize it happening.
00:46
I'm Bailey Parnell,
00:48
and I will discuss the unintended consequences
00:50
social media is having on your mental health.
00:53
I will show you what's stressing you out every day,
00:55
what it's doing to you,
00:56
and how you can craft a better experience for yourself online.
01:02
Just over a year ago,
01:03
my sister and I took a four-day vacation to Jasper, Alberta.
01:08
This was the first no-work vacation I had taken in four years.
01:12
On this vacation, I was going dark.
01:16
I was turning on airplane mode, no email and no social media.
01:21
The first day there,
01:22
I was still experiencing phantom vibration syndrome.
01:25
That's where you think your phone went off,
01:27
and you check and it didn't.
01:29
I was checking incessantly.
01:30
I was distracted in conversation.
01:32
I was seeing these gorgeous sights Jasper had to offer,
01:35
and my first reaction was to take out my phone
01:37
and post it on social.
01:39
But of course it wasn't there.
01:42
The second day was a little bit easier.
01:44
You might be thinking I'm ridiculous,
01:46
but I hadn't been completely disconnected in over four years.
01:50
This was practically a new experience again.
01:53
It wasn't until the fourth day I was there
01:55
that I was finally comfortable without my phone.
01:58
I was sitting with my sister, literally on the side of this mountain,
02:01
when I started thinking to myself:
02:03
"What is social media doing to me?
02:05
What is it doing to my peers?"
02:07
That was only four days, and it was anxiety-inducing,
02:10
it was stressful and it resulted in withdrawals.
02:14
That's when I started to ask questions
02:17
and have since started my master's research into this subject.
02:21
I've worked in social marketing primarily in higher education
02:24
for most of my career.
02:26
That means I work with a lot of 18- to 24-year-olds,
02:30
which also happens to be
02:31
the most active demographic on social media.
02:34
The other thing you need to know about me
02:36
is that I'm young enough to have grown up with social media,
02:40
but just old enough to be able to critically engage with it
02:42
in a way that twelve-year-old me probably couldn't.
02:45
My life is social media: personally, professionally and academically.
02:49
If it was doing this to me, what was it doing to everyone else?
02:55
I immediately found out I wasn't alone.
02:59
The center for collegiate mental health found that the top three diagnoses
03:03
on University campuses are anxiety, depression and stress.
03:08
Numerous studies from the US, Canada, the UK, you name it,
03:11
have linked this high social media use
03:14
with these high levels of anxiety and depression.
03:17
But the scary thing is that high social media use
03:20
is almost everyone I know:
03:22
my friends, my family, my colleagues.
03:25
90% of 18- to 29-year-olds are on social media.
03:31
We spend on average two hours a day there.
03:34
We don't even eat for two hours a day.
03:37
70% of the Canadian population is on social media.
03:42
Our voter turnout isn't even 70%.
03:45
Anything we do this often is worthy of critical observation.
03:49
Anything we spend this much time doing has lasting effects on us.
03:54
So let me introduce you
03:56
to four of the most common stressors on social media,
03:59
that if go unchecked
04:00
have potential to become full-blown mental health issues,
04:03
and this is by no means an exhaustive list.
04:07
Number one: the Highlight Reel.
04:11
Just like in sports,
04:12
the highlight reel is a collection of the best and brightest moments.
04:16
Social media is our personal highlight reel.
04:19
It's where we put up our wins, or when we look great,
04:21
or when we are out with friends and family.
04:24
But we struggle with insecurity
04:25
because we compare our behind-the-scenes
04:28
with everyone else's highlight reels.
04:30
We are constantly comparing ourselves to others.
04:33
Yes, this was happening before social media,
04:35
with TV and celebrity,
04:37
but now it's happening all the time, and it's directly linked to you.
04:42
A perfect example I came across in preparation for this talk
04:45
is my friend on vacation: 'brb, nap ...'
04:48
(Laughter)
04:50
'Wait, why can't I afford a vacation?
04:53
Why am I just sitting here in my PJ's watching Netflix?
04:56
I want to be on a beach.'
04:58
Here's the thing, I know her very well.
05:01
I knew this was out of the ordinary for her.
05:04
I knew she was typically drowning in schoolwork.
05:06
But we think, 'Who wants to see that?'
05:09
The highlights are what people want to see.
05:11
In fact, when your highlights do well,
05:13
you encounter the second stressor on social media.
05:16
Which is number two: Social Currency.
05:21
Just like the dollar, a currency is literally something we use
05:26
to attribute value to a good or service.
05:29
In social media, these likes, the comments, the shares
05:31
have become this form of social currency by which we attribute value to something.
05:36
In marketing, we call it the 'Economy of Attention'.
05:39
Everything is competing for your attention,
05:41
and when you give something a like or a piece of that finite attention,
05:45
it becomes a recorded transaction attributing value.
05:48
Which is great if you are selling albums or clothing.
05:52
The problem is that in our social media,
05:55
[WE are the product.]
05:57
We are letting others attribute value to us.
06:00
You know someone or are someone that has taken down a photo
06:03
because it didn't take as many likes as you thought it would.
06:07
I'll admit, I've been right there with you.
06:09
We took our product off the shelf because it wasn't selling fast enough.
06:15
This is changing our sense of identity.
06:17
We are tying up our self-worth of what others think about us
06:20
and then we are quantifying it for everyone to see.
06:23
And we are obsessed.
06:25
We have to get that selfie just right, and we will take 300 photos to make sure.
06:30
Then we will wait for the perfect time to post.
06:35
We are so obsessed
06:36
we have biological responses when we can't participate.
06:40
Which leads me to the third stressor on social media.
06:43
Number three: F.O.M.O.
06:46
It's a light phrase we've all thrown around.
06:49
F.O.M.O., or the 'fear of missing out', is an actual social anxiety
06:53
from the fear that you are missing a potential connection,
06:56
event, or opportunity.
06:58
A collection of Canadian Universities found that 7/10 students
07:02
said they would get rid of their social networking accounts
07:05
if it were not for fear of being left 'out of the loop'.
07:08
Out of curiosity, how many people here
07:10
have, or have considered deactivating your social.
07:14
That's almost everyone.
07:17
That F.O.M.O. you feel, the highlight reels, the social currency,
07:21
those are all results of a relatively 'normal' social media experience.
07:26
But what if going on social every day was a terrifying experience?
07:30
Where you not just question your self-worth
07:32
but you question your safety?
07:34
Perhaps the worst stressor on social media is number four:
07:37
Online Harassment.
07:40
40% of online adults have experienced online harassment.
07:45
73% have witnessed it.
07:48
The unfortunate reality is that it is much worse and much more likely
07:52
if you are a woman, LGBTQ, a person of color, muslim -
07:55
I think you get the point.
07:58
The problem is that in the news we are seeing these big stories:
08:02
The 18-year-old Tyler Clementi,
08:04
who took his life after his roommate secretly filmed him kissing another guy
08:08
and outed him on Twitter.
08:10
We see women like Anita Sarkeesian being close to shamed of the internet
08:14
and sent death and rape threats for sharing their feminism.
08:17
We see these stories once it is too late.
08:21
What about the everyday online harassment?
08:23
What about that ugly snapchat you sent your friend
08:26
with the intention of it being private, and now it is up on Facebook?
08:29
'And so? It's just one photo, it's funny.'
08:32
'Just one mean comment, not a big deal.'
08:35
But when these micro moments happen over and over again, over time,
08:40
that's when we have a macro problem.
08:43
We have to recognize these everyday instances as well.
08:46
Because if they go unchecked and the effects unnoticed,
08:49
we are going to have many more Tyler Clementis.
08:54
The effects are not always easy to recognise.
08:56
How many of you have noticed the notifications at the top of my screen?
09:00
How many of you, like me, are bothered that they're not checked?
09:04
Ok, let me check them for you. (Sighs) Okay!
09:10
Just one small example of what this can do to you.
09:13
Maybe you simply cannot focus because your notifications
09:16
are going off the handle, and you need to check.
09:20
That need, eventually becomes addiction.
09:24
Regarding social media, we are already experiencing
09:26
impairment similar to substance dependencies.
09:29
With every like, you get a shot of that feel-good chemical, dopamine.
09:33
You gain more of that social currency. So what do we do to feel good?
09:37
We check likes - just one more time.
09:41
We post - just one more time.
09:44
We are anxious if we do not have access.
09:47
Doesn't that sound like every drug you have ever heard of?
09:50
Yeah!
09:52
So when that grows,
09:54
when your social media use goes unconfronted overtime,
09:56
that's when we see the rising levels of anxiety and depression:
09:59
the F.O.M.O. the distractions, the highlight reels, the comparisons;
10:03
It's a lot, and it's all the time!
10:06
The Canadian Association of Mental Health
10:09
found that grades 7-12 students who spent two hours a day on social media
10:14
reported higher levels of anxiety, depression and suicidal thoughts.
10:19
For those of you doing the math, that's as young as twelve years old.
10:26
Here is the thing, I like social media. I do, I love it.
10:31
Hearing what I've said today
10:32
might make you think I want you to get off of it.
10:35
But I don't.
10:36
I don't think it's going anywhere,
10:38
so I'm not going to waste my time
10:39
telling you to spend less time on social media.
10:42
Frankly, I don't think absence is an option anymore.
10:45
But that does not mean you can't practice 'safe social'.
10:51
Everything I have talked about today
10:54
has nothing and everything to do with social media.
10:58
I mean, social media is neither good nor bad.
11:01
It's just the most recent tool we use to do what we have always done:
11:05
tell stories and communicate with each other.
11:08
You wouldn't blame Samsung Television for a bad TV show.
11:12
Twitter doesn't make people write hateful posts.
11:16
When we talk about this dark side of social media,
11:18
what we really talk about is the dark side of people.
11:21
That dark side that makes harassers harass;
11:23
that insecurity that makes you take down a photo
11:25
you were excited to share.
11:27
That dark side that looks at a picture of a happy family and wonders
11:30
why yours does not look like that.
11:33
So as parents, as educators, as friends, as bosses
11:38
this dark side is what we need to focus on.
11:41
We need preventative strategies and coping strategies
11:45
so that when you have your low days - because you will -
11:48
when you're questioning your self-worth, you never get as low as Tyler Clementi -
11:52
and the many others like him.
11:55
'OK, Bailey, how do you find social media wellness?'
11:59
Here's the good news:
12:00
Recognising a problem is the first step to fixing it.
12:04
So hearing this talk is just that, step one: recognise the problem.
12:08
You know the power of suggestion,
12:09
when someone tells you about something and you start seeing it everywhere.
12:13
That's why awareness is critical.
12:15
Because now you will at least be better able to recognise these effects
12:18
if and when they happen to you.
12:22
The second thing you are going to do is audit your social media diet.
12:27
The same way we monitor what goes into our mouth,
12:30
monitor whatever goes into your head and heart.
12:32
Ask yourself: 'Did that Facebook scroll make me feel better or worse off?'
12:37
'How many times do I actually check likes?'
12:40
'Why am I responding this way to that photo?'
12:43
Then ask yourself if you are happy with the results.
12:45
You might be and that's OK!
12:48
But if you're not, move on to step three.
12:51
Create a better online experience.
12:54
After my partner did his audit,
12:56
he realised his self-worth was too tied up in social media,
12:59
but particularly celebrities reminding him of the things he didn't have.
13:03
So he unfollowed all brands and all celebrities.
13:06
That worked for him.
13:08
But it might not be celebrities for you.
13:10
For me, I had to purge other people off my timeline.
13:13
Let me tell you a secret.
13:14
You do not have to follow your 'friends'.
13:17
The truth is that sometimes our friends,
13:19
or the people we have on Facebook as a courtesy,
13:23
they just suck online!
13:24
You find yourself in this passive-aggressive status war
13:27
you didn't even know was happening.
13:29
Or you are looking at 50 photos of the same concert from the same angle.
13:33
(Laughter)
13:35
If you want to follow artists, or comedians, or cats,
13:39
you can do that.
13:41
The last thing you will do is model good behaviour.
13:43
Offline we are taught not to bully other kids in the playground.
13:46
We are taught to respect others and treat them how they deserve.
13:49
We are taught not to kick others when they are down,
13:52
or take pleasure in their downfalls.
13:54
Social media is a tool.
13:55
A tool that can be used for good, for more positive groups,
13:59
for revolutions, for putting grumpy cat in Disney movies.
14:03
(Laughs)
14:04
Internet is a weird place.
14:07
Is social media hurting your mental health?
14:09
The answer is: it doesn't have to.
14:11
Social can tear you down, yes, or it can lift you up,
14:15
where you leave feeling better off, or have an actual laugh-out-loud.
14:20
Finally, I have 24 hours in a day,
14:22
if I spend two of those hours on social media,
14:25
then I want my experiences to be full of inspiration, laughs, motivation,
14:29
and a whole lot of grumpy cat in Disney movies.
14:33
Thank you.
14:34
(Applause)