I Control My Feed Now, Not the Other Way Around

Daily writing prompt
How do you use social media?

I walked away from social media for over two years. Just cut the cord. No dramatic announcement. No farewell tour. I just stopped showing up. And guess what? The world didn’t end. My brain got quieter. My time came back. Funny how that works!

Most platforms feel like digital junkyards. Endless noise. People yelling into the void, pretending it matters. Algorithms deciding what I should care about. Everyone performing. Nobody actually connecting. It’s exhausting. I hit a point where scrolling felt like chewing on aluminum foil.

So I left.

For two years, nothing. No Facebook. No Instagram. No whatever-new-app-people-were-obsessing-over-this-week. Just real life. Conversations that don’t need a “like” button. Silence that doesn’t feel empty. It felt like I stepped out of a crowded room that I never wanted to be in.

Then I added Facebook back. Barely.

I use it like a tool, not a lifestyle. Family. Close friends. That’s it. No random adds. No arguing with strangers. No getting sucked into comment sections that spiral into chaos. If it doesn’t serve a real connection, it’s gone. My feed is small, controlled, almost boring. Perfect.

And honestly? That’s the point.

Then there’s Mastodon. That’s my daily driver now. It’s quieter. Less polished. Less desperate. People talk, not perform. No algorithm trying to shove outrage down my throat. No constant pressure to react. It feels like the early internet before everything got monetized into oblivion.

Less mess. Less fuss. Less complaining.

I don’t need social media to feel connected anymore. I use it when it serves me. Not the other way around. That shift matters. Most people don’t even realize they’ve handed over their attention like it’s nothing. Time disappears. Mood tanks. And for what? A handful of notifications and a dopamine hit that fades in seconds.

Not interested.

Now I treat it like junk food. Small amounts. On purpose. No mindless consumption. If it starts feeling heavy, I step away. No hesitation. No guilt.

There’s something weirdly freeing about not caring what the internet thinks of you. No constant updates. No need to broadcast every thought. Just living life without narrating it.

Maybe that makes me boring.

I’m good with that.

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