The First Step
The first step to recovery is admitting you
have a problem which can be hard to do if you aren’t aware that you have problem.
What many people don’t realize is that addiction isn’t just drugs, alcohol or
gambling; in fact it can be anything. If the TLC television show My Strange
Addictions has taught us anything, it’s that people can be addicted to a
broad range of things from shopping to eating toilet paper, drinking urine, and
sniffing baby powder. One addiction that
is growing in popularity is the addiction to the internet and more specifically
social media.
- · Women are more active on social media than men 55% vs. 45%
- · 91% of online adults use social media regularly
- · 40% of people spend more time socializing online than they do face-to-face
- · Facebook is the most visited website on the internet (reaching one trillion page views on June 30th, 2011)
- · 50% of Facebook users log on everyday
- · The average user spends 700 minutes per month on Facebook
- · Almost 50% of 18-34 year olds check Facebook when they wake up – 28% before even getting out of bed
- · 50 million users log onto Twitter every day
- · Users on YouTube spend a total of 2.9 billion hours per month on the site
- · Smartphone users are twice more active on social media than non-smartphone users
As you can see
from these statistics we spend a lot of time online, updating statuses,
connecting with friends and family, watching videos, posting photos and videos
and playing games so it’s no big surprise that someone can become easily
addicted. The hard part however, is
admitting you have a problem and this can be because you are in denial or are
simply unaware of the impact social media has on your life.
Over the next
few weeks, I am going to post about how you can help prevent yourself from
becoming addicted to online activities and the social media world, as well as
tips for those who are already addicted and need help. Each week I am going to
post a challenge to hopefully get you thinking about how much time you are
spending online and how it’s affecting your life. My challenge for this week is
simple, keep a journal and record how much time you spend on your social media
websites (Facebook, Twitter, Pintrest, LinkedIn, YouTube...etc.) and how much
time you spend on other activities (outings with friends or family, reading,
watching TV, biking…etc.) and record your observations in the comments below.
I look forward
to your observations!
-Tiffany.H
Hey Tiffany
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your posts and the statistics. It is a big eye opener to people once they see real numbers that prove how much people really are spending time on social media. The numbers are rather high but not exactly surprising due to the availability that social media offers. I find it interesting about how women tend to use social media more than men but I guess it is because women love gossip and the latest news but who’s to say men don’t. The one that not necessarily shocked I but I was more surprised at the high number was about “91% of online adults use social media regularly”. That is a large number and is a bit drastic in a sense. It kind of makes you wonder what the world has come to.
I found this link; http://www.jeffbullas.com/2012/04/23/48-significant-social-media-facts-figures-and-statistics-plus-7-infographics/, and it made me kind of laugh because they quote that “Apparently there are 600 million more people that own a mobile phone compared to those who own a toothbrush.” It’s really quite disturbing that there are more people who own mobile phones then toothbrush. I guess that means there are a lot of people with stinky breath!
-Kristie M