Facebook is getting so awkward, isn’t it?
Personally, I can’t take the pressure. It was bad enough when our parents, aunts, and uncles began to join. I don’t know about you, but sometimes I still manage to forget they’re in my contacts and I say something wildly inappropriate only to be scolded seconds later. Then all these apps and games and silly questionnaires came through and all the sudden I’m forced to virtually break up with my friend because she won’t stop telling me to water her virtual crops. Sure, I could just weed through my privacy settings and try to block app invites, but if my friend is the kind of person that constantly bugs me to water her fake crops, do I really want to be her friend anymore?
These are the sorts of hard-hitting questions I’m faced with every time Facebook ‘upgrades’.
Things got even more intense when Facebook leveled-up to real-time updates so that when you stare at your mini-feed you can actually see someone’s comment post at the very moment they do it. And now, the ultimate mega stresser: Facebook chat.
It could be the super awkward hermit in me, but the chat is where I draw the line. The beauty of Facebook used to be that it was casual and cool. People could post on each other’s walls at their leisure. In a world where the weight of a cell phone text or an email is so heavy that people expect a response immediately, Facebook was the one place I could still go if I wanted to socialize at a relaxed pace.
Facebook relaxation is now dead to me.
When I log on, I have updates that need tended to. I have people commenting on pictures or saying hello or writing on my wall to ask me to hang out that same day. I have messages from friends who haven’t caught up in a while and think email is too impersonal. And sometimes while I’m tending to those things, someone is online at the very same moment and responds immediately. Immediately! Then there’s all this pressure. Do I have to follow up? Can I go log off? They’re on. They see me. They know I updated only 5 seconds ago; it’s stamped right there in cold, gray text. I can’t possibly just leave – I have to finish the conversation.
I also have to manage my status updates. Because if I tell a friend I’m too busy to hang out one night but I update my status at 8:35pm saying how much I love Arrested Development, it’s voluntary incrimination. It doesn’t matter if it’s on in the background while I’m working. It doesn’t matter if I thought of a funny episode and it wasn’t even on television. That friendship is doomed.
Doomed.
Don’t even get me started on birthdays and engagements. Talk about stress! Seriously?! Every year on my birthday I have to be wished a happy birthday by hundreds of people I haven’t talked to in ages. On one hand, it’s nice to feel loved. On the other, you know that if any of those people really cared about your birthday they’d have called. Or written. Or emailed. And now I feel inclined to follow up with them to see how they are, but I don’t know if they were really reaching out or if they just wanted to hop on the birthday bandwagon.
I don’t even recognize some of their names.
I’m not the only one who feels this pressure. I know it. Because not long ago, some dear friends of mine got engaged. And while I was relishing in the happy moment with them, they admitted that they were quite exhausted because they had to be sure to call every single person that was even remotely close to them to let them know they were engaged before those people saw it on Facebook and got offended that they found out online and not from them.
You see? What are we doing to ourselves?!
So no, Facebook, I will not be utilizing your ‘Facebook Chat’. The last thing I need in this too-accessible age is to log on and be immediately available to a thousand people, try to figure out how to end conversations with everyone because I don’t want to deal with them, and then worry about what to update my status to that will be amusing but also not indicate that I was having too much ‘not-too-busy-to-chat’ fun.
Lord help us; Facebook will be the end of us all. ♣








Amen! Facebook has distanced a lot of friendships and relationships. There are constant entanglements. It appears that status, connections and public identity are very important. High school?
LikeLike
First of all, I loved this! Secondly, congratulations on being Freshly Pressed! And thirdly… speaking of pressure and overwhelming social responsiveness… how are you doing with a ll of your new-found FP attention!?! 🙂 Talk about social busyness!!
I too do not use chat and I weigh out what and mostly when I post based on whether or not I want certain people to know that I am “on.” If you’re say—hiding out for the night—you can’t possibly get on there and tell your friend how much you love their new haircut!
Good luck to you and enjoy the social attention that is being FP’ed!
LikeLike
First, thanks! Second, thanks again! Third, I’m doing all right. I don’t mind attention I signed up for. It’s the involuntary type that really bothers me 😉 Thanks so much for stopping by and sharing. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
LikeLike
high school indeed!
LikeLike
Ah, if I had a dollar every time I blogged about how Facebook grinds my gears! I’d have… well, only four dollars actually, but that’s not the point!
I totally agree with you. I’ve eliminated my birthday just for that very reason (the people I most care about have no need for a Facebook reminder), plus as security precautions. I’ve also permanently turned off chat.
LikeLike
I might do the same. Or just leave entirely. Especially after all this talk about it – I’m exhausted by the idea of it. haha
LikeLike
I set my alarm for 1,3 and 5am to harvest my crops, then I started dreaming about Green Cows.
= Deactivation… lol
LikeLike
Seriously?! Oh man, you had it bad. 🙂
LikeLike
Don’t worry, Jackie. Now that people over 50 are jumping on in record numbers, Facebook will soon be dead for the young. Have you heard of Tumblr?
LikeLike
lol nice.
LikeLike
I use Facebook but solely for the purpose of my WordPress blog. I can’t be bothered with the rest of the rubbish that gets written all hours of the day and night.
Some people are up most of the night chit-chatting on Facebook.What a waste of good sleeping time!
Another thing which bugs me is that every Tom, Dick and Harry wants to ‘be friends’..OH NO NO NO! I only need to speak to MY friends and relatives and even then I usually get into trouble because of something I have said.
One of the best things about getting older is that you can say what you mean, and mean what you say.
To Hell with Facebook!
LikeLike
rubbish indeed!! 🙂
LikeLike
I’m glad I had the foresight about all of this to refuse to be on facebook in the first place, even though almost everyone I know was begging me to get on. Perhaps you should just delete your account and go back to just calling, emailing, or texting who you want. To heck with all this super-accessibility. We, your followers, know where you are, and we love you, even if we don’t know your status 3 seconds after you post it. 🙂
LikeLike
I would love to do all that – thanks for the encouragement. And grats on abstaining! I truly admire it 🙂
LikeLike
This is exactly the reason why I don’t add family members on FB.
No family, no relatives, no cousins… This rule was forged in steel.
LikeLike
I wish I would have set up more rules. The ‘no colleagues’ one was great. If I had more of them, maybe things wouldn’t be so darn angsty.
LikeLike
I love facebook. I don’t use the chat all that much, but occasionally I find it useful. I have family all over the world so facebook is a good way to keep in touch. I am picky about my friends. That said, I have found facebook to bring on some awkward moments, specifically when I connect face-to-face with people I knew several years ago. See: http://sinavratil.wordpress.com/2011/07/08/socially-awkward/
I can totally see where you’re coming from!
Happy writing!
LikeLike
It appears quite a few people can! I’m floored by the responses.
I have to admit your post makes ME feel awkward. seriously. I feel all creepy crawly with angst. bleck!
LikeLike
I agree with this post 100%! Attagirrlll!
LikeLike
Thanks so much!
LikeLike
Well…..you don’t have to worry about dear old Mom visiting you on Facebook…….I was out of there a long time ago. Nothin like having someone find you,when you didn’t want to be found ,to wise you up and get you off that site. Now I only visit you here =)
LikeLike
I was actually quite relieved when you left. Not that I ever really posted anything to have you worry about – but one must still take precautions 😉
thanks for visiting me mommyyyyyyy!!
LikeLike
‘crack book’ – that is what my manager calls ‘face book’.
I have one (or two?) I am not sure because I can’t remember the password for it (them?) and haven’t signed in for well over two years.
People at work use face book to voice concerns and vent — – Uh….
Not a good policy as far as I am concerned.
I bet I can find plenty of other ways people can violate my privacy.
Stay away from it Jackie – far away…
M.L.
LikeLike
two facebooks?! Ew, I don’t even friend colleagues because it’s just a mess waiting to happen 🙂
I’m hoping to back slowly and carefully away from the facebook. But it’s…just…so..hard.
LikeLike
This is so true! And the ultimate irony is I just posted this to my FB 🙂
LikeLike
No lie! 🙂 xoxox
LikeLike
me too 🙂 I concur with everything stated. I had a friend call me to announce her engagement before she put it on Facebook so I wouldn’t feel offended, oi. I’ve also held conversations via posting on a photo in real-time, it’s a little creepy to be honest.
LikeLike
it’s all just so terrible!
LikeLike
Oh the irony! Same here.
LikeLike
Thank you!!
LikeLike
Haha..same irony here 😀
LikeLike
Hey – thanks!
LikeLike
Definitely. From people unfriending each other, to Facebook drama.. it is FILLED with awkward moments.
Have you ever accidentally “Liked” a really old picture? That straight out gives it away that you were Facebook stalking them.. WHOOPS!!
Edwin
LikeLike
No- the goofiness comes into play when your smartphone with a touch screen starts randomly picks up on your breath droplets and you inadverently “Like” that someone bought some apples for their coffee press, or that their cow needs watering, or that they need 10 more nails to torture some rival in mafia wars. When I get to my PC, I see that I’ve liked all that lame crap and then am officially humiliated. I don’t play those games but it sure looks like I’m a big fan. Then, I go back and “unlike” all that- and the people who responded “Hey, Thanks!” and start sending me those god-forsaken game invitations are upset. THAT is awkward.
LikeLike
LOL I’ve never been aware of this challenge. I find it hilarious. And of course, super duper awkward. Thanks for the laugh 🙂
LikeLike
actually I didn’t even think about the fact that it would be obvious I was stalking when I did that. I’m clearly too dense to be a user. Ugh.
LikeLike
Amen Sister. I have a love/hate relationship with Facebook. It’s getting intense, especially with your aforementioned “minute-to-minute” updates. I recently “liked” a wall post of my ex’s friend’s profile. I didn’t realize until days later. I “unliked” it when I realized. Oh goodness.
http://beckyyk.wordpress.com/
LikeLike
aw. kward.
LikeLike
Completely agree. This is why I am logging onto facebook less and less. It is just too much of a hassle. And recently, I discovered that there is a “mini-feed” right next to my main news feed. It tells me such fascinating things like, “Caroline just ‘liked’ your picture.” right next to the other feed that shows that Caroline “liked” my picture. How many ways can I be notified of this pressing news? Soon they’ll be another third feed that gives a live play by play update of what I am doing on facebook. “Darla is commenting on a comment about comments.” “Darla’s eyes are glazing over.” “Darla is sick of facebook.”
LikeLike
LOL I love this comment. Thank you so much for sharing.
LikeLike
THANK YOU for putting words to my Facebook phobia! Good lord, it’s just full of pressure nowadays!
LikeLike
indeed it is – and so flattered you enjoyed the read. Thanks for stopping by!
LikeLike
I hear ya! The worst part is now with the latest ‘upgrade’ to facebook for iPhone app – I appear to be ONLINE all the time.. and receive Facebook chats as messages. So it appears that I’m online, receiving your message and just not responding by choice.
Lord help us all!
LikeLike
oh gross. just one more reason smartphones scare the bejeezus out of me 😉
LikeLike
Facebook is pointless, yet so addictive. I used to be a ‘facebook whore’ (which I believe this is the correct, official, terminology for a facebook addict), but after deactivating my account for a couple of months I can now live without it! Haha.
At my age (17), all facebook is, is a popularity contest of who can get the most likes on a status or photo. It’s ridiculous, there’s enough of that in reality, let alone the cyber world too!
Great post (:
LikeLike
I sure hope I can disengage as well. Kudos to you for your cold turkey conquest! I hope to walk in the trail you have blazed. 🙂
LikeLike
I deleted my profile for most of the reasons you posted above… and because I’m scared of Big Brother. 🙂 Anyways, I promise there’s life (happy life) outside of the Facebook realm of torture.
LikeLike
And someday I shall frolic through its forests
LikeLike
That’s so true
I think the most awkward thing was when you show public your relationship status with someone and then this person delete and block you when breaking up..!It really sick.
LikeLike
isn’t it wild that we’ve actually found a crappier, more disrespectful way to break up with someone besides texting? The ultimate terrible move: the Facebook breakup. So immature.
LikeLike
Good god, I know what you mean. I’m beginning to avoid FB altogether. It some ways it was better when we lived in Vietnam and access to FB was blocked. I guess if it gets too bad you could always escape to relative anonymity of a communist country.
Kathy
LikeLike
LOL well – I wouldnt want it to not be an option. I would just like to be better at saying no. 😉
LikeLike
As of right now, I have 1,547 unread FB messages. FB has gotten out of hand. Great post!
LikeLike
that’s just way to much stress for me. You should delete those all and start from scratch. Ew! 🙂
LikeLike
Haha, I totally agree! I genuinely get so panicked when someone writes on my wall and I don’t respond and then I realise they can see me on chat! But, even worse, now I know that this happens to me, I do it to other people! I write on my friend’s wall… they’re ‘online’… they don’t reply…..cue: “Why aren’t they replying to me!? They are clearly online and able to respond!”. Unhealthy much. Great post 🙂
LikeLike
The angst! It’s killer.
Thanks so much for stopping by and sharing 🙂
LikeLike
Somebody wrote and funny status message, Facebook is getting hit why ? because it is working on the principle. “People are more interested in others life instead of their own”
LikeLike
so very true.
LikeLike
Hilarious! AND SO TRUE!!!!!!!! Congrats on FP!
LikeLike
Thanks a lot!
LikeLike
I propose a mass abandonment of Facebook… Liberate yourself from facebook and free up hours of leisure time – and learn who your REAL friends are!
LikeLike
Judging by how many other folks are upset, I reckon it could be arranged 😉
LikeLike
Nice post there 😀 Facebook privacy settings are good but Google+ circles concept is a bit better.
LikeLike
Agreed – I love Google +’s circle concepts. I wonder what it will grow into though… 😉
LikeLike
Read this and it truly humours. Let’s hope someone from the facebook admin reads this and realizes that its a complete social trap.
Good points made. Agree with all of them. haha
LikeLike
Thanks for stopping by – I’m so glad you liked it!
LikeLike
lol.. with facebook in our lives we have no privacy, especially like you said when our parents, aunts and teachers started to join, and it is vastly becoming an obsession or should i say an addiction, i know many people who are addicted to facebook, they are on it 24 hours a day and when they aren’t on it, they are talking about it..great post.. 🙂
LikeLike
ugh. UNPLUG, right? maybe someday we’ll all just stop.
LikeLike
Love it! This morning I told a friend “sorry i didn’t answer your call last night, i was asleep.” but my newsfeed showed me posting pictures roughly around the time of the call. busted.
LikeLike
lol busted indeed
LikeLike
Nice post.
I have been a little shocked to read on Facebook about such major events in people’s lives like a major surgery, their cancer, their marriage or engagement. Even the death of a partner.
I don’t get it. If I’m truly your friend, we speak or email enough I know this is happening to you and am sharing your life; just got off the phone with a friend in another country whose husband is awaiting test results.
If I am not that close, why are you sharing such personal data with 400 or 700 or 2500 people?
I loathe the people who collect armfuls of “friends” so they can simply spam us with all their new products and books. Not interested in a preen-fest, thanks.
LikeLike
Agreed and well said!
LikeLike
those are some good points that hit home. I’m wondering though if facebook has plateaued? Myspace at one point was the place to be and now facebook. I’m wondering when Mark Zuckerberg and his crew will decide to sell the website to yahoo or something for billions of dollars. After that, who knows what will be the next big thing. But I know that facebook isn’t going to last forever just like TV genres throughout the decades.
LikeLike
I sure hope so. Really. And I wonder what society will do in reply to Facebook – will we revolt and get super private?
LikeLike
Amen!
LikeLike
Thanks for stopping by!
LikeLike
FB is evil 🙂
I do not have an account, but my son does, so I can take a peek at my friends’ photos 🙂
LikeLike
ooooh you’re SO using your son for Facebook which is the same as having Facebook 😛
LikeLike
Totally agree with you here. I deleted my facebook account recently for these reasons. All those games were ridiculous. All the updates. All the strange people wanting to be in my Mafia gang or enter my Hair Salon (I didn’t even know I had a hair salon?!! And my wife gave me some very peculiar looks over that one…).
I read a few weeks ago that 100,000 people had deleted their facebook accounts in the last few months. Maybe sanity is returning.
I think the entrance of businesses into using Facebook and seeing it as a marketing tool spelt the end of it just being a place to keep in touch with friends.
LikeLike
oooh that would be fantastic if it were the beginning of a downward trend. And I agree – when something begins to be about money, it’s almost always the downfall 🙂 Grats on being Facebook Free! I hope to follow in your footsteps soon
LikeLike
This is precisely why I just check it once a day. I know that’s hard for most. Great post. Congrats on being Freshly Pressed.
LikeLike
once a day, but how long I wonder? 😉 Thanks so much for stopping by!
LikeLike
I agree with most of what you (and the commenters) are saying. Facebook is weird.
Mistressofpoetry said, “I’m glad I had the foresight about all of this to refuse to be on facebook in the first place, even though almost everyone I know was begging me to get on.” Then stay strong! I don’t think anyone should ever join Facebook unless he actually wants to.
On the other hand, in my experience so far, Facebook is largely what you make of it. I don’t put my birthday or “relationship status” or a lot of other stuff on there; so I don’t get deluged with stock “happy birthday” wishes on my birthday, awkward questions about when a relationship should be considered “Facebook official”, etc. I probably log on to FB once every couple of weeks, and with a few exceptions, my more-frequent-user Facebook friends seem to accept that.
LikeLike
I agree! The problem is that I didn’t abstain from things early on. I refuse to ever friend colleagues, so I don’t have to deal with that stress. Had I laid down rules for other things as well, I wouldn’t have those issues either.
But hey – none of us knew what we were really getting into, right? We were just along for the ride 🙂
LikeLike
Wow. This post totally hit home for me. I have a strong love/hate relationship with facebook. I hate it because I waste so much time on it — yet I love it because litereally every single one of my friends has it. If I delete it I will be out of the loop in everyone’s world and although some things can get annoying – like the same person posting 5 new status update’s a day – it keeps me in tune to what people are up to that I would have had no clue about it any other way… And I like knowing what my old high school buddies and friends that I don’t see often in other states are doing with their lives…I think if it wasn’t so addictive it wouldn’t be such a terrible thing… 🙂
LikeLike
That’s rough, isn’t it? I want to leave, but I tried that already and found myself completely out of the loop for, well, everything. I agree there are good aspects, like being able to connect with long distance folks you actually care about – but lately the bad seems to outweigh the good for me 🙂
LikeLike
hhahah luv it! I wrote something about this a few weeks ago too!
LikeLike
Thanks for sharing your post – with all the folks who have written about this, I’d say WordPress is ripe for a revolution.
LikeLike
I absolutely agree with every word you wrote. There’s so much technostress associated with facebook now it’s not even funny.
Yet we are addicted. Until the next orkut/facebook/twitter/social networking thingamajig comes along!
LikeLike
technostress – good term. Also, had never heard of orkut!
LikeLike
I agree with you 100%!! It’s like FB was this cool casual coffee shop where you could meet up with friends, but now it’s this crazy insane nightclub with a bunch of people you don’t know coming up to you! I got off of FB for two years and never missed it. I had to get back on for work purposes and I realize now why I got off in the first place…I thought I would feel more connected to everyone, but I just see the gap growing larger.
LikeLike
LOL love the analogy and I certainly agree. And isn’t it strange how we’re more connected than ever and yet are so disconnected?
By the way- hate running but love your blog. Seriously – nice little corner of the web you have there!
LikeLike
Yes! Ahem I agree. And what’s really sad is that people feel the need to grow a fake garden rather than a real one and post every intimate detail of their lives. No, thank you, I do not need to know that you’re grocery shopping or making out with your boyfriend or going to the bathroom (Seriously, is that next?). I can’t decide what’s worse: That people post those things in the first place or that other people respond to them.
LikeLike
If all the folks who had fake gardens planted real ones, I’m convinced we’d be well on our way to great diets, locally sourced food, and a little less hunger.
Agreed!
LikeLike
Hahah oh my gosh, I know what you mean! It’s better to just not have a facebook at all! 🙂
LikeLike
Agreed! I hope I can take the plunge soon.
LikeLike
Thanks! A really interesting and provocative post. I wrote recently about ‘Media Revolutions and Friends’ (which I’ll update with a link here) concerned about how the meaning of ‘friendship’ was becoming fractured by Facebook. I think you’ve put it into practice brilliantly.
I’m so disappointed by the number of people who brand themselves as a great friend to make themselves feel good, but think it’s enough to have you linked on Facebook to maintain the facade. That, to some people in the real world, means little. If I can travel 300 miles, and others of this eulogising sort cannot travel 3, merely because I’m always there to say hello to on Facebook whenever boredom sets in, we’ve got to ask what it’s done not only to our practice, but to our theory of friendship.
LikeLike
Thanks for the link; I’m a big fan of recommendations. And I love what you’ve said here; thanks so much for the contribution.
LikeLike
It is these things that got to me sort my ‘friend’ list and bring it down from 600+ to 71. and though it makes me realize how idiotic i Was to have added all these people, and also to know many of these are offended that i removed them (why i cannot understand, as we Never talked), it also makes me realize how good it feels.
I don’t give a crap to fb updates because right now, my fb has people who i connect with in the real world and who are not petty enough to outcast me only because i was online and didn’t reply instantly. everyone has times when they do not wish to speak then and there, and it is Not reflective of my friendship with that person. Thankfully my fb friends understand that.
For me, fb is still that luxurious cafe to meet friends. Also adding to the fact is, fb does not operate in my college… so I see it once a week, during the weekend. At first, I thought I would die without constant fb, but now i know that i am living better.
Great post.. and will see the rest of your blog soon. 🙂
LikeLike
wow 600 -> 71! And it wasn’t idiotic – As I said to another commenter – For a time, it was kind of autopilot to friend folks. There was a thrill to growing your network and connecting. But now that we see the repercussions, of course we regret it.
I admire your hardiness and hope to emulate it myself. Perhaps some weeding is in order. 😉
LikeLike
Facebook truly makes me realize how MUCH time some people have on their hands. So there’s yet another level of awkward: It allows us to make judgments about how others use their free time. And when they’re constantly on it — don’t we all make assumptions about them?
I don’t mean to be judgmental — totally not my style. But whereas Twitter started out being the social media vehicle for “I just peed” or “I’m having oatmeal right now,” Facebook is slowly taking over.
And don’t even get me started on the whole new “You might be from (fill in city name) if…” obsession. Ugh…
LikeLike
I hate to be judgmental as well…but when someone can’t unglue their phone from their hand for an hour and a half in a movie theater lest someone comment on their status and quickly get lost in the outpouring of postings from their other 1500 friends, they have a PROBLEM.
🙂
LikeLike
agreed, agreed, and agreed.
LikeLike
And that is why I hardly every update my status and why I never sign into facebook chat. And yet I am compelled to read everyone’s updates. 🙂
LikeLike
of course – that’s where the addiction lies
LikeLike
I couldn’t agree more. This is the very reason I often take FB sabbaticals (on one right now – just had a birthday and it exhausted me). I mean, honestly, if these people really want to talk to me, my email is RIGHT THERE on my page. If it can’t wait, email me. I can get it from my phone. Or, gasp, ask for my phone number and text me. Or, even better, get an effing Twitter account. So much better.
LikeLike
this is the second “sabbatical” I’ve heard of. Didn’t realize folks really did that – perhaps I’ll attempt it as a segue to leaving forever 🙂
LikeLike
Facebook is evil. EVIL. I can identify with every last thing you said in this post.
LikeLike
yes – evil indeed. 🙂 Thanks for stopping by!
LikeLike