you, “‘What’s Happening?’,” Facebook asks you, “‘What’s on your mind?’,” and Instagram is telling you the image is not enough, “‘Write a caption…’” While living in a FOMO based time it’s often hard to resist the temptation of letting it all out on the world wide web–but try.
There really are benefits to keeping some things for yourself. –Like the protection of the vision. Not everyone can see what you see and because of that, they speak from limited perception. By letting them into your world you allow them to project their fears and limited vision onto you and sometimes convince you to abandon it all together. More on this later in its own article, but the point for now: Stop with the loud silent moves.
2. Making Things a Thing That Aren’t a Thing: The past ten years have really given rise to the “conspiracy theory,” and I’m thinking now would be a great time to let that go. I understand that some things are REALLY hard to accept at face value, but alas…we must. Not everything is a distraction, not everything is the man holding us down, some things are just exactly what they are.
Let’s take the H&M controversy, for instance. H&M puts a black child on their website wearing a sweatshirt that reads, “The Coolest Monkey in the Jungle,” and the internet goes crazy. First, with their initial feelings of disgust (rightfully so) than with their theories as to what happened (wait, what?).
YES! People were saying the parents were unaware, the image was photoshopped, the pictures were snapped when no one was looking and more. I legit almost lost a friend over