Sunday, February 23, 2014

I'd Rather Share Photos

A few weeks ago, the point was made in class that many social media users care more about documenting an experience than actually living the experience itself. (I believe this was the day we watched the “I Forgot My Phone” video.) I see myself as a “light” social media user and so it was a shock for me to realize that I have actually done this in the past.

To set the scene: It's a sunny day in London. I have just gotten off the train at Euston Station and am immersed in the towering, cultured city for the very first time. Do I head off and start touring parks? Do I sit down and enjoy a cup of tea in this foreign wonderment? No; instead, I take out my camera and begin what will be a never-ending photo session of the city. All the while I am taking these pictures, all I can think is, “This would be a great thing to show on Facebook” or “Wait until my friends back home see what I'm doing now.” By the end of my two day trip, I had taken over 500 pictures—but I cannot say that I really got to enjoy London. I was so caught up in documenting the experience to show online that I did not really live out those two days.

But my Facebook friends that saw those pictures would tell you that I had the time of my life.

In the class readings, Katie Roipie's article, in the latter part, explains how adults even show a less natural version of themselves on Facebook. She states that “Facebook is the novel we are all writing.” I believe that this idea is seen in my incessant documenting and posting of my trip's photos. Regardless of how I actually experienced the event, I wanted my Facebook friends to see my experience a certain way. And I can admit that I wanted a few of them to be jealous, especially the Facebook friends who never got to leave my small hometown: here I am in London, doing all these great things...and what have you been up to? The Facebook novel that I was writing in this instance showed myself as having grand, exciting experiences although the process of writing that “novel” made sure that wasn't necessarily so.



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