After 12 or 13 years as a heavy Facebook user, today is my last day posting on my account there. At least for now. I have mixed feelings about this.
Facebook is addictive by design. A lot of very smart people work hard to design the platform in such a way that users spend more and more time there. The more time a user spends on the platform, the more money Facebook makes.
Companies design their products in ways that suit their own needs, so I don’t blame Facebook. The people there aren’t evil. They simply have incentives to get me to do things which I have decided aren’t healthy for me.
Social media has been a good thing for me in some respects. It’s allowed me to connect or reconnect with people who wouldn’t have been in my life otherwise. I’ve made friends because of Facebook. The platform enabled me to reconnect with a woman who I then fell in love with as a result. And it’s maintained ties with people I might have lost touch with otherwise.
But those positives come at too great a cost. I believe it’s dangerous for all of us, but I’m especially convinced that it’s unhealthy for me.

We love great tales of salvation, but real change rarely happens
Self-compassion is difficult when harsh inner judge condemns you
If you care about education — not just schooling — please read this paper right now
Reaction to Googler’s memo says, ‘Diversity is good if you conform’
Group conflict isn’t as simple as tales of good guys vs. bad guys
Rush Limbaugh is just as partisan and ignorant as MSNBC’s Ed Schultz
What if biggest risk to our lives comes from our own unhappiness?
Search for ‘more’ can leave us craving what we haven’t found