Thursday, October 24, 2013

Facebook: Fact or Fiction?


     I was in line at the store the other day and I overheard a couple of ladies talking about their "friend's" post. They went on and on about how she is always bragging and had posted about going out with some other friends.  Apparently these two talking about her were not invited but rather saw pictures of the girls night out posted and they were not happy about not being invited.  They felt slighted even though, from the sounds of their convo, they seemed to dislike this chic but yet their jealousy over the event and not being invited was pretty clear.

     I had to laugh a little and think of the ridiculous amount of times I have heard that same story from countless girls (from tweens, teens, young adults and beyond).  Clearly, this crazy phenomenon of social media has enhanced so many of our social circles (can you denote my sarcastic tone)? 

     I thought of the endless and hopeless conversations I have had with girls over their sadness about similar situations....non invites to patio parties, GNO's, birthday parties, retirement parties, school parties on and on.  The seeming torture of seeing pictures of events they weren't invited to by people they secretly didn't even like and "friends" they did not get to hang out with.  So many people lament over this crazy thing we call social media for a million different reasons.

     My question is simple. Are we really being that social and developing in depth relationships online?  A place where you can embellish, exaggerate or flat out lie without many who can or will challenge you on it.  Is this even healthy?  Typing away behind the mask of the internet.  No consequences. Just statements, parties and pictures.  Making your world look picture perfect and dreamy.  It is a junior higher’s worst nightmare and yet it goes well beyond pimples, glasses and braces. Ah, yes, now it goes well into adulthood...parties you weren't invited to, people you didn't get to hang out with, lives you wished you had, perfect lives and families paraded for all to see.  Realty inflated. It is the equivalent of being held back in junior high for eternity!

     A recent study I read in Huffington Post was challenging this exact concept as the article was talking about the negative consequence this online display is having on our youth (and I would add to that...our adults, too).

     Clearly these couple of girls are not alone in their feelings over their 'friend' and her posts.  Reading braggadocios posts about a fake  perfect life or the most amazing life ever when, in all reality, you just got off the phone with your real life best friend or sister after crying about how horrible your marriage is, your friends are, or your family is but then you post how amazing everything is.  Or in real life telling a friend how much you really do not like some person and list their flaws and next thing you know they are having a great conversation on a wall stating how much they love being friends. Or playing favorites with your friends by publicly praising one instead of the other....can't a private phone call or text let them know they are your favorite friend in the whole world instead of making that statement for all to see, leaving the other friends wondering why? It breeds insecurity for even the most secure girl. I think a new social media rule should be if you can't say the next postable statement to your closest friends and family without them laughing and telling you that is a flat out lie or gross exaggeration than you can't post it.  Can that be the new rule?

     There is an old adage moms used to say to us in junior high that I feel we, in this age of social media, have veered far from.  If you don't have something good to say, don't say anything at all and that doesn't mean make up something good when it really isn't that good....just don't say anything.  

     Don't get me wrong.  I love social media just as much as the next girl but what I absolutely hate is hearing how inadequate, unloved, hurt or angry it makes so many people.  You could use the line of thinking that you are not responsible for how everyone else takes your posts and you are right. Your page. Your posts. True.  I would argue, however, if you are posting with a vindictive, ulterior motive to 'get back' at someone, make them jealous or hurt someone passively aggressively, then just stop.  Conversely, if it is truth and sincere then post away with all your thoughts, jokes, event PR, invites and pictures of your Pinterest dinners and I will too. 

     My husband has often said, Amy, your FB "friends" are mostly cyber friends who do not have a vested interest in your real life.  Real life friends sit across the table from you with a cup of coffee, listen to you, cry over spilled milk with you, or rejoice over tiny milestones with you.  They know the in's and out's of your personality and love you still the same.  They don't talk to you often through FB instead they talk through face to face visits, phone calls and texts. 

     They are the ones, when they unexpectedly see you somewhere, they run up to you, hug your neck and start talking a hundred miles an hour to catch up (sometimes in Target, Sarah P. :) ), rather than duck away down an aisle in effort to not see you or have to talk to you.   Cyber kind of friendships are generally superficial but are the first ones to get their panties in a bunch if they find out they have been unfriended by someone because, dear Lord, that would mean their number of 'friends' have gone down. 

     Real friends (vs cyber social media friends) are those who know your birthday without a cyber prompt or know when an important meeting is coming up even if you don't post about it, or they know that you have crazy week planned even though you never breathed a word of anything online, or simply the miles, states or countries need to be overcome by keeping in touch through social media (those friends are awesome too even though the miles keep you separate for most of the year).  

     They are the people who will spend hours laughing with you (or at you depending on the subject) or even more hours listening to your pain, hurt and disappointments and then cheering you on to press in and keep going.  They go beyond the trite "praying" post in response to a real life problem...they take the time to actually pray because you are a friend who is so important to them that they couldn't imagine their world without you in it. 

     So, to all the girls (and maybe a guy or two) that has been hurt by social media, just take this one piece of advice.  

Believe only half of what you see and nothing that you hear.” ― Edgar Allan Poe (on social media sites anyways).
     Rather, go find your real friends (the ones who have stuck with through thick and thin and the ones you have just met and love spending time with too) and grab a cup of coffee. Realize the reality, that cyber "friends" are generally not real close friends and that nobody's life is that picture perfect. 
     Know that true face to face meaningful friendships will never be replaced by a FB/IG/Twitter account and that fictional posts are just that...fictional. True perfection in life and relationships comes from not having to be perfect but from being loved despite your imperfections by those who love you and challenge you to keep pressing on in this messy and very real life and that is a fact.

Monday, October 7, 2013

For Every Action.

The dust is finally settling down from the absolute insane craziness of life in the last few weeks. Selling, closing, building, buying, closing, packing, moving and Inspire.

Last week I was trying to focus on about 10 too many things! I knew I was leading up to our last Inspire event of the year and for several weeks, I kept thinking of ways I could sum up this last year of Inspire. I wanted to give an overview and explain the heart of what I tried to accomplish through all of our events and outreaches. To no avail. I could not articulate an accurate enough description of what I had been trying to accomplish.

Our event came and went and I could not give the kind of description I wanted to give. The event went amazing and our guests were awesome. I was pleased that it did what it was suppose to do. Bring awareness and opportunities for action. 

However, I was left with an empty feeling that I was not able to articulate a clear enough description of what Inspire had meant to me. I left thinking maybe I wasn't meant to explain and share with everyone what had taken place in my heart over the year since I wasn't even sure what had taken place. 

I went on from Friday night and didn't think much about it until Sunday morning when this clip was played as an opening to our pastor's message.  The clip opened with words "Inspired by true stories" and a million of emotions flooded my heart as I realized that countless numbers of people had taken this same journey as I have been on these past few years, yet I never realize what I had been trying to do...Take a moment to watch this clip by Linkin Park. It is a powerful video is a story of what this little boy did with the pain and loss of his dad.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScNNfyq3d_w


Isacc Newton was quoted as saying "For every action, there is an opposed and equal reaction". Such a true and applicable statement for things well beyond science.

The very word Inspire means to stir, to motivate, to animate, to influence by divine power.

After meeting so many amazing people this year I began to realize that we are all trying to bring something from something. All trying to bring action from an action that has happened in our lives.  Sometimes we choose a negative action but sometimes we are divinely inspired to bring a positive action or change.  A God inspired action.

To Inspire, you must be inspired.  I have learned that the majority of things we choose to do in life, is a direct relation and/or reaction to something that has happened to us in our lives.  We are so many times compelled to make a difference because there was something we felt was wrong that we needed to make right. From one action we are inspired to take another action. We set out on a quest to do something, bring meaning, make a point, bring purpose, bring healing and many times bring closure.

When we are faced with enormous trials in life we have a choice.  We choose to shrink back and become bitter or we choose to stand up fight through it, turn it around and become inspired to bring meaning out of a horrible event in our lives.

As I watched the video, I realized that so many times this year I wanted to prove a point to myself, that not all was lost in my life.  That even in brokenness and pain, God could still use this life of mine...but now at the end of this year of Inspire I have come to realize that it wasn't that He could use my life despite my brokenness and pain...He could use my life because of my brokenness and pain. I have come to realize that my focused, myopic and, at times, unrelenting drive to make a difference in this world didn't happen because I was talented or any more special than anyone else.  It was because, from the action of loss in my life, I so desperately wanted God to bring His opposite and equal reaction from that event. I have somehow wanted God to work through me to bring life from that death I felt so deeply. I have met so many people this year all inspired by that same motivation.

Isn't that the very nature of God though? Bringing life from death. Such the beauty of who He is. 

I am and will be on this quest for life.  Asking God to bring meaning from both the deep loss and the mundane events of life.  From changes to monotony, in all things I want Him to Inspire me to get up and do something, make a difference, be the change and live the life He created me to live, cracked glass, pain, joy and all of it together for Him!

Be inspired to do the same....