55 min

Social Media's Impact on Your Health, with Chris Martin (S5, E11‪)‬ Simple Doesn't Mean Easy

    • How To

Today Chris Martin, content marketing editor at Moody Publishers, is joining us. Chris is the author of Terms of Service: the Real Cost of Social Media & The Wolf in Their Pockets. Chris has been studying and writing about social media for over half a decade and you're going to enjoy his practical, encouraging insights.

In this episode
Does Social Media actually impact our health?The average person is using social media for 2 1/2 hours every day and multiple studies have linked social media use to depression, anxiety, loneliness and suicide.Social Media use leads to feelings of inadequacy, self-absorption, distraction, sleep disruption, and keeps us from developing real-life relationships.So whether we want to admit it or not, our social media usage DOES impact our health.95% of young people use social media and devoting a huge amount of time to itHow studies have shown that teens face double the risk of mental health issues because of social media use and habits3 ways to look at social media (and why 2 are wrong)The connection between TV of the 60s and today’s social media platformsHow entertainment went from a 1-way street to a 2-way oneWhy social media is not simply a teenager problemThe most common thing kids want to be today when they grow upPractical suggestions to limit the impacts of social media 
Resources mentioned in this episode:
The Wolf in Their Pockets
Terms of Service: The Real Cost of Social Media 
Amusing Ourselves to Death, by Neil Postman
Techwise Family, by Andy Crouch
 
To snag Michelle's Master Class on DIY kombucha at less than HALF PRICE
 
Ways to spend less time on social media:
Show yourself that the unpredictable (therefore addicting) results of social media are pretty predictable on your mood: For 1 week, 1x a day write down how you feel (from 1 to 10) before scrolling social media and again after.Plan a real-life gathering with friends. Make time to get outside.Make exercise a "have to" and put it on the calendar.Find a place you'd love to volunteer a few hours a week.Spend time, face to face, with one friend every week. 
Follow Today's Guest on twitter: @chrismartin17
For more information: https://soulyrested.com/2023/06/19/social-medias-impact-on-our-health-with-chris-martin-s5-e11/

Today Chris Martin, content marketing editor at Moody Publishers, is joining us. Chris is the author of Terms of Service: the Real Cost of Social Media & The Wolf in Their Pockets. Chris has been studying and writing about social media for over half a decade and you're going to enjoy his practical, encouraging insights.

In this episode
Does Social Media actually impact our health?The average person is using social media for 2 1/2 hours every day and multiple studies have linked social media use to depression, anxiety, loneliness and suicide.Social Media use leads to feelings of inadequacy, self-absorption, distraction, sleep disruption, and keeps us from developing real-life relationships.So whether we want to admit it or not, our social media usage DOES impact our health.95% of young people use social media and devoting a huge amount of time to itHow studies have shown that teens face double the risk of mental health issues because of social media use and habits3 ways to look at social media (and why 2 are wrong)The connection between TV of the 60s and today’s social media platformsHow entertainment went from a 1-way street to a 2-way oneWhy social media is not simply a teenager problemThe most common thing kids want to be today when they grow upPractical suggestions to limit the impacts of social media 
Resources mentioned in this episode:
The Wolf in Their Pockets
Terms of Service: The Real Cost of Social Media 
Amusing Ourselves to Death, by Neil Postman
Techwise Family, by Andy Crouch
 
To snag Michelle's Master Class on DIY kombucha at less than HALF PRICE
 
Ways to spend less time on social media:
Show yourself that the unpredictable (therefore addicting) results of social media are pretty predictable on your mood: For 1 week, 1x a day write down how you feel (from 1 to 10) before scrolling social media and again after.Plan a real-life gathering with friends. Make time to get outside.Make exercise a "have to" and put it on the calendar.Find a place you'd love to volunteer a few hours a week.Spend time, face to face, with one friend every week. 
Follow Today's Guest on twitter: @chrismartin17
For more information: https://soulyrested.com/2023/06/19/social-medias-impact-on-our-health-with-chris-martin-s5-e11/

55 min