Getting Dumped In The Digital Age: Part II
- Thursday, August 19 2010 @ 09:32 am
- Contributed by: ElyseRomano
- Views: 2,210
Handling a break up with poise, style, and grace is a complex undertaking at the best of times, and a Herculean challenge at the worst. The technological advances of the 21st century have made a lot of things easier - communicating with friends, collecting research for college papers, ordering everything from food, to books, to clothing, to medication - but the explosive popularity of social networking sites has made getting dumped more difficult than ever.
I'm back today with more wise words and astute advice from Brenna Ehrlich and Andrea Bartz about what to do when, as they so eloquently put it in "How to handle a break-up online," "you've had your heart ripped from your chest" and the aorta is "geysering blood across your bedroom floor, on which you are currently sprawled." Last time, we discussed how to avoid having your emotional wounds reopened every time you sign onto Twitter or check into Foursquare. Now it's time to take on proper break up etiquette for the social networking giant Facebook and Google. Let's get right down to business.
For Facebook Users:
Facebook is like quicksand for the freshly single. The moment you slip and start spying on your ex's profile, you can't escape, and you continue to be sucked farther and farther down into the dismal and depressing world of spying on your ex's new life without you. In the event of a nasty break up, it's in the best interest of your mental health to simply unfriend your ex and remove any photos you've uploaded of the two of you together. Don't spend hours pouring over every new picture your ex adds, every new status your ex posts, and every new message left on your ex's wall, reminiscing about "the good old days" and trying desperately to figure out if your ex is seeing someone new. You can't look forward to the future if you're stuck in the past.
For Google Users:
By "Google users" Ehrlich, Bartz, and I really mean "search engine users," and by "search engine users" we really mean everyone, so pay attention because this does apply to you! Now that search engines like Google can pull data from sites like Facebook and Twitter, social media is not the only source of break up misery online. With one simple search, you can find everything from your ex's brand new online dating profile to an article about the trophy they won during their glory days as a high school mathlete.
Self-control, as Ehrlich and Bartz point out, is not exactly in the post-break up vocabulary, particularly "after a few whiskey sodas," so don't place your sanity in the less-then-capable hands of your easily compromised, recently dumped willpower. Instead, check out the browser plug-in Ex-Blocker from the creative agency JESS3. Type in your ex's full name, Twitter username, Facebook URL, and the address of their blog, and - voila! - all mentions of your ex will be wiped from your Web browser forever.
With these tips, your break up should be a little easier to bear, at least when it comes to your life in cyberspace...and if not, it might be time to consider moving to that remote island in the Pacific.
