When I first started blogging in 2006, the medical blogosphere consisted of a small group of physicians, nurses, and patient advocates. We knew each other well, and spent time each day visiting our favorite blogs and posting personal comments of encouragement and insight. We developed real friendships, and were optimistic about our brave new online writing frontier. We thought we could change the healthcare system for the better, we believed that our perspectives could influence policy, and we were sure that our writing could help our patients lead healthier lives.
I remember with great fondness the medical blogger conference that I attended in Las Vegas in 2009. It was the first time I?d met most of my blog friends in real life (IRL) ? it was like seeing your favorite pen pals after years of correspondence. We talked all night, had marveled at how a love of writing had brought together a surgeon from South Africa, an ER nurse from California, and a Canadian rehab physician, among others. We figured that social media was the glue that held us all together. Since then, I am sad to say that for me, the glue has lost its stickiness due to dilution by third parties and a glut of poor quality content dividing attentions and exhausting our brains? filter system.
Fast forward 7 years and most of my email correspondence is from strangers wanting to embed text links in my blog, people selling SEO services, or PR agencies inviting me to provide free coverage of their industry-sponsored conferences and webinars. I can?t think of a single friend who has left a comment on my blog in the past three months. Sure we see each other?s updates on Facebook and occasionally on Twitter, but I can?t remember the last real conversation we?ve had. Social Media has become?irreversibly cluttered, and I?ve never felt more isolated or guarded about the future of medical writing.
My thoughts on this subject gelled when Twitter announced that LeBron James was following me (along with a select 80,000+ others). Obviously, LeBron has no idea who I am, and I?m almost certain he had nothing to do with his Twitter account following me. He, like many others, has outsourced his online relationship-making. It?s the ultimate irony ? using social media to distance yourself from others, while maintaining an appearance of engagement. Sort of like sending a blow up doll of yourself to a party.
So what keeps some people going on these social media platforms? Perhaps it?s the allure of influence ? the idea that many people are listening to you gives a sense of importance and meaning to your efforts. But take a cold hard look at your followers ? do you know who most of them are? Or is there a large group of ?hotchick123? type Twitter accounts counted among them? I used to block followers who didn?t seem real or relevant, but it became so much of a chore that I couldn?t keep up. I was overwhelmed by the Huns.
One could argue that my social media fatigue ?is my own fault ? I didn?t screen my followers properly, I didn?t follow the ?right? people, I haven?t curated my friendships with as much care as I ought to? But I know I?m not alone in my pessimism. A recent Pew Research poll suggests that people are leaving Facebook at a rapid rate. And as far as Twitter is concerned, it?s not for everyone.
I guess the bottom line for me is that social media isn?t as much fun as it used to be. I miss my blog friends, I miss the early days of being part of an online community. I don?t write as much as I used to because I don?t know my audience by name anymore. This ?party? is full of strangers and I don?t like the familiarity that continues in the absence of true friendship.
Time to spend more of my energy on my patients, family, and friends IRL. And that?s a good lesson for a doctor to learn?
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This post was originally published on Better Health.
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