by Edie Melson @EdieMelson
TWEET THIS: Don't clog the #socialmedia world with visual noise -@EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
Social media is all about connections. It’s a digital
community where relationships are built. IN this community, the relationship
building takes place in much the same way as in a physical community. The
foundational component is sharing—sharing lives, sharing thoughts, sharing
hopes and dreams. But with all this sharing, there are still things we don’t
need to know about one another.
I hate to say this, but I’ve seen all of these irritating updates
show up in one or more of my social media feeds. My reaction on seeing these
has ranged from mildly irritated, to what-was-she-thinking shock. I’d love
for you to make note of these, and avoid them completely
TWEET THIS: Don't clog the #socialmedia world with visual noise -@EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
8 Social Media
Updates You Should NEVER Share
1. The stream of
consciousness updates: Now that I’m
up, I’m having coffee. Back from the shower and trying to decide what to wear. Dreading the mountain of laundry staring me in the face. Trust me, none of us care. So quit clogging the feed
with visual noise.
| Avoid the cliffhanger update. |
2. The cliffhanger
update: You’ve seen them, they’re those thinly veiled attempts for
sympathy. I’m so angry I could spit. Why
do people have to go out of their way to do rotten things. Crying in the
corner.... Ninety-five percent of us are just irritated by these updates. The other
five percent can’t resist the ploy and ask for more information. If you need to
vent and can’t do it online, call a friend. (Just FYI, this also applies to those photos you might post of you doing something dangerous. The image to the right is one I found of our son while browsing my FB feed. It's a good way to give your mother gray hair, not to mention a stroke.)
3. The I’m on
vacation updates: I’ve heard of so many instances where the homes of
vacationers have been burglarized all because the family posted updates about
their travels. Telling large groups of people your house is going to be vacant
is an open invitation for a robbery. Be smart, share your vacation photos and stories after
you get back home.
4. The vicious rant update:
You’ve heard me say over and over again that you should never post anything
negative about anyone online. That’s what I’m talking about here. It’s hard
enough to mend relationships when you just speak the words. Putting them in
writing will ensure you’ll be fighting this battle the rest of your life.
5. The Unverified
pictures of missing/ill/ abused/dying children update: There is a lot of junk
floating around social media. For some reason, certain sick people use
emotional updates to further their own gains. They sign up for accounts under
false names and use the likes and shares to build a presence online. When we
don’t take time to check whether or not an update is true, we clog the feed
and further the nefarious schemes of these lowlifes. (to verify an online
story, visit http://www.snopes.com/info/whatsnew.asp)
| Avoid the "Let me break it to you here" update. |
6. The let me
break it to you here update: We’ve all seen these, too. Glad to be alive,
just totaled my car. Wow, look at this cool cut on my hand that’s dripping
blood in the shape of a cross (yes, one of my boys sent this one). There are
others, but you get the idea. Trust me, social media isn’t the way to break bad
news, even if the end result was no big deal.
7. Specific
information and pictures of the children in your life: This one is serious—life-threateningly serious. We live in a world
that preys on children. I can’t stress enough the importance of censoring what
you share about them online. This means being smart about everything from embedded geo codes in
photos, to what schools they attend, and what activities they’re involved with.
Be smart and keep the kids safe.
8. The invitation to
play a game update: Now I admit this one is my personal peeve. But you might be
surprised by the number of people who share my irritation. If someone I know
chooses to play games, that’s fine. I’m not making any judgments here—I enjoy a
good game of mahjong and 2048 as much as the next guy. But please don’t clog
my feed with invitations to join you. If you need more lives and the only way
you can get them is to invite friends to also play, be courteous and check with those friends first.
These are the list of things I never share online. I’d love
to know what you’d add to the list.
TWEET THIS: 8 #socialmedia updates you should NEVER share - via @EdieMelson (Click to Tweet)
Edie Melson is the author of numerous books, as well as a freelance writer and editor. Her blog, The Write Conversation, reaches thousands each month. She’s the Director of the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference and the Social Media Mentor at My Book Therapy. She’s also the Military Family Blogger at Guideposts. Com, Social Media Director for Southern Writers Magazine and the Senior Editor for NovelRocket.com. Connect with her on Twitter and Facebook. Look for her newest book, While My Soldier Serves (Worthy Inspired), available at bookstores and online.
Edie Melson is the author of numerous books, as well as a freelance writer and editor. Her blog, The Write Conversation, reaches thousands each month. She’s the Director of the Blue Ridge Mountains Christian Writers Conference and the Social Media Mentor at My Book Therapy. She’s also the Military Family Blogger at Guideposts. Com, Social Media Director for Southern Writers Magazine and the Senior Editor for NovelRocket.com. Connect with her on Twitter and Facebook. Look for her newest book, While My Soldier Serves (Worthy Inspired), available at bookstores and online.


Edie, good advice on every point. The one that sets my teeth on edge is the posting of stories that turn out to be spurious--Snopes is sometimes skewed in its interpretations, but it's a good place to start to check out the accuracy of many of these posts. As for invitations to play games, so far as I'm concerned this is a call for me to not only decline that invitation and every other one that goes with the game, but to block further communication from that person. Personal preference, but it's not for me.
ReplyDeleteRichard, I'm right there with you on both those. And you're correct, Snopes is a good start, but not always accurate! Blessings, E
DeleteGreat advice, especially #8.
ReplyDeleteThose are all great, Edie, but the ones that hurt my heart are the ones that seem to make Christ's love or acceptance a condition of sharing a post. The "If you acknowledge Jesus before men, He will acknowledge you before the Father!" or "Share if you love Jesus" ones break my heart. What if a weak Christian is sucked in by that or a nonbeliever thinks that is true? Maybe I'm being over sensitive.
ReplyDelete