my online self vs my offline self

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Recent events on Facebook have got me thinking, and I wanted to share some thoughts about the difference between my online self and my offline self.

I think the word you'd use to describe the online me is ... uninhibited. She (and forgive me for using third person here) giggles a lot, huggles just about anybody, acts silly to make her friends laugh, makes friends easily, has even flirted with people, and probably overshares her personal stuff.

The offline me is shyer, struggles to connect with and understand people (hey, I scored very close to being Autistic, what does that tell you), sometimes struggles with being touched, and is generally much more guarded. Plus, my social struggles were added to by having to deal with gender problems and PTSD, neither of which tend to make a person want to be a social butterfly.

So am I "lying" when I am online?

Well, I don't think so. First, all those character traits are in me, they may not come out as much in real life, but they aren't something I've fabricated. Plus, the details I share are real - that's my picture, I really live in Edmonton, and so on.

I say all this to say that I kinda understand how what happened here happened, how a person might find comfort in presenting themselves as someone better than they see their true self to be, and if said person does come back under their real name (and a apology, of course) I will probably give them a second chance.

Be kind to each other, each person you speak to might be fighting a battle of which you know nothing ..l

Comments

Not lying,

But the anonymity lets you be the person online you wish you could be in person. I have changed from a shy youth to a raging extrovert over my lifetime, much like my mom. I do wish we were neighbors, I would take you under my wing. Like many here I respect your artistic ability a lot.

Hugs!

Yes, I can relate.

Hypatia Littlewings's picture

"But the anonymity lets you be the person online you wish you could be in person."

I have noticed that about my self. I probably is not really unusual.
Wish we could all be who we would like to be.

*huggles*(to everyone here)
>i< ..::

All that we can be

Rhona McCloud's picture

What you have described are not false faces but parts of who you are Dorothy. In real life I have similar dilemmas dealing with my emotional age which wanders between 35 and 85 according to circumstances

Rhona McCloud

Fake It, Until You Make It

Sometimes when I want to change, I pretend to be what I want. I act the way I think I should act if I had that trait, ability or emotion.

After awhile, I begin to believe that I am who I pretend to be, then I am no longer pretending.