IT’S ME, ME, ME, AND THEN ME AGAINWhy do so many people feel the need to share everything they do on social media?
For many, the urge to post every aspect of their lives online stems from a desire for validation or approval. The "likes" and comments serve as a kind of positive reinforcement that makes them feel good about themselves. Each interaction acts like a small dose of dopamine, making it hard to resist the urge to keep sharing.
Social media also allows people to build and display an idealized version of their lives, a sort of digital showcase where everything looks perfect. This might be driven by a narcissistic tendency, where the goal is to attract attention and stand out from the crowd. The pursuit of that "perfect" public image becomes a form of self-affirmation, even if it doesn’t fully align with reality.
It’s a way to compete with others, trying to prove that their life is more interesting or exciting. In many cases, the need to share becomes an endless cycle of comparison and competition, where what really matters is not what is actually lived, but how it is presented to the world.
# Watch videos
Grandma’s 10,000 steps.
I SAW THAT GOING DIFFERENTLY IN MY MIND VOL85They say experience is the best teacher, but if there’s something even smarter than learning from our own mistakes, it’s learning from the mistakes of others. Life is full of lessons, and sometimes those lessons come in the form of falls, bad decisions, or simple errors that others have made before us.
Why suffer the consequences of a poor choice when we can observe, analyze, and learn from what others have already experienced? Watching someone trip allows us to avoid the same obstacle. Seeing someone make a bad decision teaches us to choose a better path. Each mistake made by others is a learning opportunity, and if we can avoid making them ourselves, all the better.
Remember that behind every fall, there’s a lesson, and if we learn from what others have gone through, we’re one step ahead. Take advantage of that wisdom!
# Watch videos
The slow-motion of the day.