Spyke
lemmy.ml

I am totally on the bottom right group.

192
chocratesreply
piefed.world

Yeah, I'm in the void. I have no idea what I'm doing and I'm sad.

13

Hope you are well!

I highly encourage a therapist and ssri's if you are not doing well.

They won't make you happy but you won't be suicidal!

3
arcinereply
jlai.lu

Me too ! I've cut off all my former high school / college "friends" for various reasons. Deleted all my accounts. I don't exist online under my legal name, and I like it that way.

6
qarbonereply
lemmy.world

I think that's a subset of "disappeared". If you followed up on the people who disappeared, it's a coin flip as to whether they just hate people or have fallen on hard times.

63
lemmy.ca

Hey, just because I'm a degenerate doesn't mean I don't care about maintaining healthy relationships with my friends!

10

Then we'll work with the admission board to see if we can't get you into "obsessed with work" on a "degeneracy" path.

2

Believe or not, that's still a "disappearing."

Might even be a double disappearing.

2

Drugs / Degeneracy can fall into all 4 of these categories?

You think that workaholic doesn't need a little help? That trainer, a boost? While the e family takes some to forget how stressful it is to works multiple full-time jobs.

13

Such a liberating feeling to finally understand that you're not bound to follow some externally plotted life trajectory...

... and just debase.

1
lemmus.org

Cant disappear from social media if you really weren't there to begin with.

Though i fall in the bottom left corner, always training, though not for something. Training just to train more.

54
Dagnetreply
lemmy.world

Im both bottom left and bottom right, disappeared to train for nothing.

9
Dagnetreply
lemmy.world

Well, I train because its good for my mental health, I think it counts?

5

Proud member of the bottom right. Oddly, it has made me a big topic of conversation among my friends, and I don’t get that at all.

53
realitistareply
lemmus.org

How do you know this if you've disappeared? There are people like this in my life that no one has heard from in 20 years. Now that's hardcore.

23

Meh, I’m not hardcore, I just don’t have social media and I don’t do weddings, birthdays, or anything involving children, so I pretty much just meet up with them at shows these days.

17
lemmy.world

How are they in your life if you haven't heard from them in 20 years?

9
zerofkreply
lemmy.zip

They’re in his basement. Nobody else has heard of them.

28

I don't think that's odd. People's lives are boring and not much happens, it's interesting to talk about unknowns.

It's like that scene in good will hunting. The best part of my day is when I walk up to the door and imagine you just left.

3
lemmy.world

You know, for about a decade, everyone was pushed to share everything they did on social media. It was a mistake. It was a mistake on the scale of cigarettes and smoking inside and in airplanes and in hospitals and in schools. No one thought it was a stupid idea, and a lot of people pushed it as the only way to get jobs and show you're a clever chimp that can internet so hard because interneting hard was the cool new thing.

Lower right is the hangover from that. Anyone I didn't find or didn't find me between 2008 and 2018 wasn't ever worth connecting with. The people that did find me were nice to hear from once, and we haven't talked ever again, despite being connected, for 10+ years.

My grandparents and their parents, etc. went their whole lives never seeing people again and not knowing what happened to them because they moved one time and they didn't know their new address. Whole movies were about that. Elvis had a song about that. The last episode of the first season of The Real World ended with everyone moving out of the apartment, and once that landline and address no longer went to those people, it was 100% possible that those people would be gone from each others' lives forever.

Y'all, we're not supposed to collect and keep 27,000 casual contacts throughout our lives. It's unnatural. Our brains are not built for it. We're made to have a few dozen up to 100-ish close connections that mean something, including family you don't pick.

Email some old friends you don't text with daily. Send anyone you truly care about an email to say hi. If they respond, then great. If not, don't worry about it. Enjoy high fidelity communications with those who mater to you.

50
lemmy.world

We are not built to drink milk beyond infancy, yet we do. We are not built to cross oceans in a few hours, wake up in one time zone and fall asleep in another, yet we do. We are not built to eat ice cream on a scorching summer afternoon or preserve food for months and experience flavors from far away, yet we do.

The argument that something is "unnatural" has always struck me as incomplete, because humanity's defining trait is that we are not merely shaped by nature, we reshape our relationship with it. We build tools, cultures, institutions, and technologies that allow us to transcend many of the constraints our ancestors lived under.

That does not mean every new capability is wise or healthy. Some inventions enrich our lives; others burden us in ways we only understand decades later. But the fact that something exceeds the limits of our evolutionary past is not, by itself, an argument against it.

Human flourishing has always depended less on the number of people we can reach and more on the depth of the few relationships that truly matter. I miss having many Facebook friends (some I have never physically met) and seeing their life updates every once in a while, because now we all think Facebook is no longer cool.

11

Fair points, though, maybe more so in the abstract. To be fair, when I go try and fix or adjust or tweak something, I do always tell myself "we're humans, we change our environment to suit our needs."

Though I think you're excusing burnout and BS social media hustle culture when some people simply don't want to do that. If you want to post everything on IG, go for it. But people shouldn't feel shame for falling into the lower right square. It's a decision some people make consciously, and others less so. Which, for me, feels like loss. We had this nice thing where it was great to see what my friends from 20 years ago were up to. And now I can't participate in it because it harvests my data, and I would tell them the same. The infrastructure found us, friction-free. And when it turned out that pipes were to suck us dry, the gap was real, and the previous infrastructure not up to the task of casually serving up information. Now it (barely) takes work to say hello to someone and has to be meaningful again. People should be allowed to be OK with that.

Which is to say that my evolution argument is that we have, within a generation, taxed the limits of a part of us that hasn't gradually worked up to a universal higher capacity. Better weapons have extinguished genetic lines with no regard for adaptation or evolutionary traits other than what country someone was born into. Given 30 generations, we don't physically adapt to having bombs dropped on us. We aren't selecting for terminally online people to reproduce more and be more successful in the species, either. Maybe we are and I'm so far out of it that I can't tell.

3

Gen Z here. Burnt out of social media. Deleted every mainstream social media app. If you want the fastest way to never ever hear from me, it would be email. That shits incredibly overwhelming. I check my physical mailbox more than I check my email. The goal is to get away from the computer.

6

Ain't nobody got time for that. I'm too busy working / raising a family / training for a marathon / [comment deleted by user].

40

"Why did you leave Facebook? Now we can't talk to you!"

they never spoke to you once on Facebook

5
robocallreply
lemmy.world

We can say that we're friends. That way we can have a friend.

2
Pat_Riotreply
lemmy.today

I appreciate the offer but it could never work. I kinda hate robocalls.

2
sh.itjust.works

No, I must disagree. Most of my friends are right in the centre. Many are starting families, but are also working on careers and are well intentioned gym goers who I speak to less and less because life is too busy.

38

Work means surviving. You either have the energy for it or you're fucked.

"Training" can be a fancy way of saying you are very focused on one aspect of athleticism for your health, and you'll discover that you have more energy for other things if you maintain your health and exercise. At first you feel like you don't have the energy for it, then you do it, then you have the energy for that and more.

Also many sleep way better after getting healthier, so it builds upon itself even more. Some people struggle with sleep apnea and shit like that, and one reason is the tongue holds a lot of fat. Lose weight and you sleep better. Sleep better and it's easier to lose weight and have energy to do other stuff. It's the opposite of a downward spiral.

9
Wildmimicreply
anarchist.nexus

Discipline, also known as ignoring basic needs until one burns out with a whole bunch of different outcomes from addictions to suicide

-2
Wildmimicreply
anarchist.nexus

Sadly no, i had - and still have to - reduce it. I've always been proud of my discipline, but i never used it to take care of myself, but instead used to push myself harder than i was able to sustain long term (runs in the family too). Too much discipline isn't a good thing, it becomes selfdestructive.

3
teslasaurreply
lemmy.world

Discipline is a form of self care. I think you are conflating a method with outcome in that case. I'd argue that it takes discipline to take care of yourself AND others.

1

The only difference is the amount of self-worth someone has - if you deem yourself not important, then discipline comes at a cost.

1

This is my experience, as well. It sounds like I’m a few years older than you, but almost everyone in my larger friend group is/was doing all of these things, particularly so if the bottom left is just “intensely focused on some new niche hobby.”

8

Yeah I was about to say - I'm all of these things. I feel like that's pretty common.

3

I know a guy who is three of these things. Goes to the gym 6 days a week, works in a hospital, starting a business, has a wife and a kid, and he still manages to have time to hang out once or twice a week. Man is as successful as I am not

34
uinreply
lemmy.world

As someone who is some of those things as well, I would love to know what the wife and/or child are doing during all those activities. Because something has to give when you're doing that much.

In my experience, that balance is really hard, and even in the most hospitable, high-quality-of-life places, that balance is not exactly always something that is nurtured and valued by the systems in place.

36
sh.itjust.works

I think he really is just built different. I'm good friends with both parents, and knew his wife long before he did. Both of them are working on higher education, kid goes to daycare most days every week. It's not like he never sees his son either. Usually when I hang out, we're watching his boy while we play BG3, which is nice because he can just walk away for a minute whenever a diaper needs changed

Having recieved a large sum of life insurance money after his father passed away certainly helped with the house buying and the car maintaining and the education pursuing, but his time management is pure skill

9
lemmy.world

I wonder if your friend can sleep only five hours and still function to the maximum. Apparently it is genetics. Napoleon and Thatcher could sleep less than 7 hours and could still think sharp and be fresh as a daisy.

5

Welp, don't know about Napoleon, but Thatcher pulled some stupid and evil shit.

Maybe if she had slept more, we could have had a better world ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

5
axx
slrpnk.net

This could be funny if it wasn't such a sad outlook on life.

27
WFHreply
lemmy.zip

At least you can pretend to Excel at something

26
lemmy.world

The disappeared ones. I'm one of those.

I'll tell you what we are up to. We are

22
lemmy.today

Looking forward to being on the bottom right.

At some when people get too busy to be concerned I'll delete my snap and insta leaving nothing behind. I just don't understand why people feel the need to share everything they're doing constantly or how they get upset if you don't have the energy to react to it all.

22

I just don't understand why people feel the need to share everything they're doing constantly or how they get upset if you don't have the energy to react to it all.

Dopamine hit.

14

Ive already done this at 24, no snap, insta, reddit, Facebook, and im slowly starting to get rid of tiktok now

10

I just don’t understand why people feel the need to share everything

Sign of life. Some people keep posting what they're doing even if no one cares, just a reminder they're still alive and breathing.

2
Rcklsabndnreply
sh.itjust.works

I was going to say: There's no space for dead, moved to Austin in the 10s, or crippling pain killer addiction.

8
thelemmy.club

Obsessed with work is the most obnoxious type of person. It’s a validation seeking behavior that I find intolerable.

19
lemmy.world

We do the best we can with what we know at the time. We're products of our parents and environments. You can't blame somebody for that.

4
friggereply
lemmy.ml

this goes for literally everything. Someone might still experience it as obnoxious and intolerable. Me included

I am with you on generally trying to understand the reasons for a particular behavior. Does not always help with being annoyed by it though. Especially if they apply their world view to everyone else around them and start to judge you for enjoying work/life balance

5

I'm all for understanding, but my line is drawn when the understanding fails to lead to action. My oldest friend still chooses validation seeking over all else, despite knowing that it's the crux of all his problems and knowing he has the support of everyone, he's adamant that it's not on him to change and it's on his support network to accept this as who he is and accommodate it even at their detriment. 24 years, I can't handle that. I'm not willing to undo changes I made for my mental health to accommodate a lifestyle he's admitted to being toxic.

3

I agree wholeheartedly. I just don’t like this particular behavior. I’m a little more European in that way.

1

In general I agree but a few people are lucky enough to have jobs that are cool enough to be obsessed with. That doesn't excuse them from being able to talk about other stuff with other people, but I think it's fine for them to be that way. I work in some fairly advanced science facilities and some of the people I've met are working on stuff that's crazy enough and difficult enough that you almost need to be a little obsessed to succeed at it.

4

But my job is awesome and I really enjoy it and I'd do it for free if I didn't have to worry about money. I just want to share the fun fulfilling stuff I did with my friends :(

Luckily we're all autistic enough to tell me off if they don't want to hear about it.

3
rockSlayerreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Counterpoint, the best way to organize unions is to become obsessed with everything happening within your workplace

1

I am not sure I've ever met a labor organizer but I've definitely met vest guy who just wants to talk about his job and if I try and change the subject a bit they ask me about my job...

Bonus points if they start telling a story with names from their work as if I know them.

3
lemmy.world

I'm number four. I mean, I was. Those people have probably all forgotten about me by now.

19
tetris11reply
feddit.uk

I lurk in the high school chat, saying nothing all year round except "happy birthday" or "congrats" (baby/marathon)

1
lemmy.ca

Disappeared can have a lot of dif meanings behind it these days.

18
Rcklsabndnreply
sh.itjust.works

Been spending the last 20 years at the Winchester, waiting for all this to blow over.

3

Not really though. I haven't been on the big social media platforms in forever, even during my 20s I was already gone. That doesn't withhold you from visiting parties, chilling with friends, going places, etc. The only big platform that I'm still on is WhatsApp, because it's the main way to message people here, and that's how you can go places. But I haven't go Instagram, Snapchat, Facebook, TikTok, and whatever the fuck people use to consume ads nowadays

0
Skullgridreply
lemmy.world

I was happily in the bottom 2, now I just need to get back on the career grind..
please help, the software industry is in a rut and my child needs food.

2
lemmy.world

When the definition of "friend" is "person you hung out with in HS/College and then only ever associated with via the computer", maybe you don't.

Box 4, in particular, is a really depressing rubric for friendship as it assumes a person vanishes the moment they stop providing new content on Social Media. I've got friends who occupy the first three quadrants simultaneously, but we still keep in touch by SMS and by actually visiting one another on a regular basis. We're 100% logged the fuck off past that.

9
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Box 4, in particular, is a really depressing rubric for friendship as it assumes a person vanishes the moment they stop providing new content on Social Media.

I just think of it as shorthand for the very real phenomenon that some people fall off the radar in every measurable way: can no longer be found in person, won't respond to calls or texts, no online presence (even DMs/chats, or electronic invites to in-person activities). I have a few friends in that category, and it's often something like trying to build a new life away from their past (sometimes including a new spouse and/or social circle), or even mental health issues.

And some people really do want to live off grid in a cabin in the mountains, or backpacking, or in a faraway, low-connectivity job (at sea, or in remote wilderness, or whatever else). If they end up doing that and fall off the radar, it happens.

1

I just think of it as shorthand for the very real phenomenon that some people fall off the radar in every measurable way

Sure. But there tends to be a certain distance already baked in. Unless you have a deep bound with someone - a parent / sibling / child, typically - once you stop interacting with that person IRL, there's less and less of an incentive to engage with them remotely.

1

There's also the "still acting like they're 16 years old" and they're as bad if not worse than all the other cathegories

14
lemmy.ml

Aww man, I got

Constantly working (not into it)

Be gay

Always playing map painting games

And

Declared a terrorist by UK government

14

Yeah, not to disparage his hard work organising beforehand and 2 years in prison (so far), but ultimately all he did was park really badly. At most he should be getting a few points on his license.

4
lemmy.world

Bottom half. You will never hear about my triumphs. They're mine only.

13
lemmy.world

First I started a family and then I promptly disappeared. I still have little to no social media presence. This really the only place I'm active online.

12
nord.pub

I'm the bottom right except no insta, no FB, etc. and only an email address.

11

A piefed account more technically, but yes. I technically have a lot of minor forum-like accounts around the web, but no crossover with my IRL friends, nor do I think I would enjoy interacting with them via these platforms.

5

I'm certain I fall into bottom right as the category but I can't tell where in the quadrant I'd put the dot that indicates that I'm actively still on the internet and available to be found but I've dedicated an unreasonable amount of time to avoiding the modern digital culture in lieu of a mock attempt to recapture the late 2000s digital experience. Hit me up in that chatroom or text me on my flip phone, you'll find me by my handle it's the same on every platform.

11
lemmy.world

Where's

Work

Come home too exhausted to do anything worthwhile

Sleep

Work

I don't think it falls into the first category because I really don't give a shit about my job. I just have no energy.

11
zuanareply
lemmy.world

I don't mean to be snide or clever, but it sounds like you care about your job a lot. At the very least what would happen if you did not have that job. I feel for that and it sounds like you might need to talk to someone. Could be over analyzing a small comment on the internet but your short lines of text felt... raw.

Good luck buck.

1

I think a lot of it is Long Covid, to be honest. After I had Covid I started sleeping really poorly, and I still do. I also really need to lose weight.

As far as my job goes it's actually pretty cushy. Of course, if I could find a way to survive without it, I'd quit in a heartbeat - as I imagine many people would.

6

I wish I had arranged my finances better so I could live the dream of being bottom right in a nice very functional house in the forest, with enough self-reliance and supplies to last for months and months without poking my head out of my shell.

10

Bottom right for a few years now, but it really only applies if social media is the only way you can think of to get in contact.

10
lemmy.world

I've been a combination of all 3 my entire 30's. Was obsessed with work, had kids. Got fat because of having said kids, got back into lifting weights, and I have almost 0 social media presence.

8

I’m none of those. I’m always around with nothing to say, no family, stupid job, and not training for anything. that doesn’t hold me back from being really annoying on social media. (☝︎ ՞ਊ ՞)☝︎

7

I'm top-left (my job pays well, it's engaging, and it has a positive impact on the world).

I have some friends in a 5th category that are hyper-busy with traveling, social engagements, etc. I feel like I have to book time with them weeks in advance.

5
DampCanaryreply
lemmy.world

from personal experience,
we just deleted our accounts once school/uni was over
and started new chapter

6

Those exist too but I'm certain a dosen of them are in the ground.

2
lemmy.world

Oh man I'm constantly training for something, but also bad at sports lol

5
lemmy.world

I spent some time dabbling in all four categories during my thirties. Never really excelling in any of them.

4
Skullgridreply
lemmy.world

you spent time dabbling in making a family? how's the child support payments?

5
robocallreply
lemmy.world

I never successfully conceived. I guess I wasn't doing it right.

3
Skullgridreply
lemmy.world

You gotta give a creampie. In her vagina.

Subscribe for more reproduction tips.

4

Option E: "Walking around in the woods"

It's kinda like washing reality off with the reality you can't have.

4

I’m the one who disappears for a while lol. “Is he in jail or in the Cayman Islands… who knows”

4

I beg to differ.

I'm absorbed mostly in work but also a little bit of 3, however the "something" is merely trying to stave off a heart attack and premature physical degradation in general, and not so much some grand lofty fitness goal.

And also 4. The amount of negativity that entered my brain through social media reached critical mass during the early stages of Covid and I axed pretty much all of it and never returned.

4

I tell people that I told my ROTC cadre that my nonexistent sister got me pregnant and that's why I stare at goats now, which is a fancy way to say I do counterintelligence, and everyone disappears from my perspective.

3

Possibly because, in your case, they moved to a geographical region less actively hostile to their non-binary personality, but people continuïng their outgoing Renaissance Fair / Swordfighting / Theater / Convention polycule life is a category for me.

3

Im checking three of the four quadrants. I work to much, I havea too many kids and I have dropped most of my social contacts intentionally. And im usually constantly angry i don't have the discipline to train consistently to stay fit. Currently I'm also not healthy enough to work out, waiting for a doctors appointment to hopefully fix that shit.

3
quokk.au

I think im all of these but less training for something than the other 3.

3

I am all of these to different people. None of them are particularly accurate though. For example, going to the gym twice a week makes me a trainer to the lazy ones, etc etc.

1

Nothing wrong with that. It's called figuring out what life is all about. And given that your 30s is when you properly mature. It makes perfect sense.

3

Of all my friends from before I had kids (oldest is almost 10), none of them have kids.

Most of the couples among that group are all childless and are now either divorced, gay, or both.

To be fair, though, the gay ones were gay all along.

4

the first one gives the opportunity(since Blackstone is metioned real estate, mangerial/admin banker positions, or a lucrative tech job) to have the other 2 categories besides the last one.

1

why not the last one, I feel the last one is most older people in those types of positions

1