Social Media is like a paradox of gratification and feeling like something is being accomplished when it really isn’t. The social media outlet Facebook is used to say “it feels like you’re doing something and you’re not doing anything. It’s the absence of doing something, but you feel gratified anyway.” The world we live in today lives for instant gratification and getting things right away and having fun a hundred percent of the time without working and that’s what social media is feeding into. It is giving people, especially children, the sense that they are important and that they’re doing something with their lives when really, they are wasting time when they could be doing something productive such as their homework. So many people are stuck in the paradox and it is extremely hard to get out because the more people switch tasks and look for instant gratification, their attention span will only get
Social Media is like a paradox of gratification and feeling like something is being accomplished when it really isn’t. The social media outlet Facebook is used to say “it feels like you’re doing something and you’re not doing anything. It’s the absence of doing something, but you feel gratified anyway.” The world we live in today lives for instant gratification and getting things right away and having fun a hundred percent of the time without working and that’s what social media is feeding into. It is giving people, especially children, the sense that they are important and that they’re doing something with their lives when really, they are wasting time when they could be doing something productive such as their homework. So many people are stuck in the paradox and it is extremely hard to get out because the more people switch tasks and look for instant gratification, their attention span will only get