Think Before You Send… An Insomnia Club Joint
Todayβs afterschool special-esque post is brought to you by the Insomnia Club.
I know what sexting is. Itβs an irritating verb we apply to inappropriate texts, typically of the sexual variety, sent to someone else. Some of you may know of the story of a thirteen year old girl who sent racy photos of herself to her boyfriend, only to have him pass it alongβ¦ Unwittingly this boy push-pressed the ignition button and that racy photo was well-distributed from then onβ¦
Local law officials got involved, the media, obviously, became involved and a lesson was taught once again; one that we all thought had been learned a long time ago. However, thatβs not the case and weβre having conversations over matters that should be βno-brainers.β
Sexting isnβt the problem. Itβs a symptom. Truth be told, I donβt mind one bit when my lady sends me a racy pic or some innuendo-filled message. Thatβs kinda hot and gets me through the afternoon lull. The problem is that we are still a nation of bullies. Bullying has taken on new forms, traded-in old clothes for new and yet it is still the same beast weβve all known about; you know that beast. They were featured on after-school specials, the kids that had that asshole haircut and smelled like cheese and would kick you in the nuts and take your lunch money (this is how the mean streets of Salem, Oregon were, kids. Effing crazy).
βThe Internet's not written in pencil, it's written in ink.β – the Social Network
At the core is bullying. It manifests itself in many, many ways and there are as many outlets. While sexting isnβt one necessarily of them, in my opinion, it serves as yet one more tool for people to use to punish the too-trusting and naΓ―ve among us. Itβs a real problem and one that isnβt going to go away. Even where my girlfriend teaches (she teaches 8th grade) she must be aware of what her students are doing online because it affects her classroom directlyβ¦
Oh how the world has changed, and right in front of our very eyes and keyboards.
Do any of us really βgetβ it? One movie quote I particularly liked, and a prime example of bullying, is from the Social Network. Mark Zuckerberg exploits the women on the Harvard Campus by pinning their photos to a type of On-Campus βhot or notβ website as a means to strike back against his ex. Zuck tried to apologize to his ex-squeeze, she rebuffs him βThe Internet's not written in pencil, it's written in ink.β Thatβs a lesson I learned the hard way recently.
When people are killing themselves because their inner most secrets are revealed, when their βKool-Aidβ is spilled across the floor for all to consume; we have to take a step back and think. What on earth have we gotten ourselves into? The tools that serve to bring us together through better communication and increased information sharing are also the tools that can cut the deepest and leave the most severe scarsβ¦ Itβs time to take some ownership. As friends, parents, siblings, Luchadores or whatever, we have an obligation to call attention to such bullying.
I admit that I have bullied people in the digital age, more than once. Sometimes I have bullied people by sending and re-sending, hundreds of times mind you, (using a monitoring and notification technology at one of my previous jobs. Story for another time, kids) the Goetse photo to people until they did what I wanted them to do… More seriously, though, Iβve bullied a person, for what I felt was a completely justifiable reasonβ¦ I was wrong. There was a better way to handle things. Bullying, regardless of how righteous the cause, is still bullying and it is incumbent upon us to take the βhigher road.β Hindsight is 20/20, as they say.
Where does that leave us, though? We sit at the precipice of the information age and the tools it provides. Pressing a simple insignificant βsendβ button has very real consequences in todayβs world. All Iβm asking is that before you press that send/share button is that you think before you do it. Take a few minutes and think before you sendβ¦
What my fellow Insomniacs are saying about this…
the Consensus of Flies: a Rant
Donβt Talk to Her, Sheβs a Slut by Simone Grant
Enough With the Slut-Shaming Already by MetAnotherFrog
Sexting, Sexting, 1, 2, 3β¦ by Totally Tyler
The Tale of the 13 Year-Old Slut by Confronting Love
Sexting and the Mean Girl v.2.o by Jess Downey
When Teenagers and Sexual Curiosity Collide with Technology by Miss Melisa Mae
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Hi Alex,
Indeed, I like how you cite that sexting is itself a symptom and not necessarily so much "The Issue." There is bullying, of course. And then there is also the emotional and psychological maturity level of the people involved. What mature adults, I'll arbitrarily pick an age and just say, "over 35 years old" even if publicly humiliated with a mass sharing of something intimately meant only for one's life partner, we could in all likelihood withstand it. However a 14 year old, a 16 year old, and even a 21 year old just does not likely have the emotional resources to counteract that kind of potential bullying attack. Just as you recommend, please do think before you send those pix. Or even take them! Protect yourself online and in person. Just some good dating guidelines.
April Braswell
Thanks for the comment, April. You bring up an excellent point there, with respect to maturity. What I also see as a talking point are the tools that we allow children to use these days. I'm speaking of phones and what not. It may be a bit extreme of me to say, but I think that's also a problem, too. That is, giving children these powerful phones to pretty much do as they please, when they're still too young to know better… I say take the damn phone away. Really!
I really like this post, and completely agree. People often take advantage of the fact that it's digital interaction and say things they normally wouldn't in person, and even might think there aren't real world consequences, but there are!
Great post, keep em' coming π
Lennie Ross http://lennierosswrites.com
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Thanks, Lennie. The great debate is how much should we regulate ourselves online, isn't it? It's sort of like the the wild west on the internet, isn't it?
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