Life Advice

/

Health

Ask Amy: Online pity parties don’t elicit hugs

By Amy Dickinson, Tribune Content Agency on

Dear Amy: An old school friend of mine posts often on Facebook. Her updates are mostly upbeat, entertaining, and harmless.

Over a decade ago, both her brother and her father died of unexpected illnesses. A sad situation, of course. Her mother and one remaining sibling are still alive, and they are close.

However, all these years later, she posts about her father and brother on FB regularly, noting, "Today would have been H’s 55th birthday. I can't believe he's gone..." accompanied by pictures, including (depressingly) photos of him in the hospital. Or: "Today marks 10 years since Dad started his treatment -- greatest Dad ever." Again, sad and depressing photos.

She always gets lots of sympathetic reactions to these posts.

Amy, it is exhausting and inappropriate to see these online pity parties of hers. Everyone suffers loss. But no one else I know insists on getting attention for those losses, especially monthly (or more!), so many years after they happened. For everyone else but her, it seems, grief is NOT to be flogged online for everyone else to see.

She is a successful person with a great family and a full life. Her grief over her loss is no more important, or tragic, than the losses we have ALL endured, and yet, continue she does -- and it makes me angry every time.

 

How can I let her know how utterly inappropriate these posts are?

Grieved-Out

Dear Grieved Out: Facebook’s algorithm kicks into gear each day to remind users of items they originally posted about years ago. If her family members entered the hospital, had a birthday, or passed away and she posted about it then (she obviously did), Facebook will remind her of these events now. She is being regularly triggered, and then she is choosing to share.

I happen to agree with you regarding what feel like beseeching entreaties for virtual hugs on social media.

...continued

swipe to next page

 

 

Comics

Pearls Before Swine Darrin Bell 9 Chickweed Lane Pardon My Planet Mike Luckovich Daryl Cagle