Social Media Declutter: My Change Log (2016-2018)

I have been decluttering my life for some years now. In terms of material possessions I have reached a point where I consider I have enough. I have the essential now. I have a capsule wardrobe that works for me. I don't own physical books or CD's anymore. I prefer not having decorations on the walls of my home.

Right now I am focusing on the less corporeal items of my life. I've been critically evaluating my online activity for quite a while now.

After I read the book Deep Work by Cal Newport  in 2016,  a light bulb turned on inside my head that made me think: Am I too distracted? Are we too distracted?

And the answer is “Yes, we are distracted!”. The combination of cellphones and social media has dramatically changed my behavior towards technology and that is scary! I love technology, don't get me wrong. I grew up in the non-digital world and I remember when I connected to the Internet for the first time. The Internet was a marvelous unexplored space with enormous possibilities. It meant freedom! Democratic access to information! Connection!

And now I feel entrapped when I am online. I feel like I don't have control. I feel like I am inside a weird experiment where my choices are not my own. I feel like a victim. So I decided to take some action!

The Process


My decluttering process was like this:

  1. Make a list of all the social media account that I have.
  2. Log into the accounts and check the status: Have I been using it? Do I like it? What do I use it for?
  3. Make a plan for each one of them, listing their purpose and what I want to do with them.
  4. Delete the accounts I no longer use or update.
  5. Reevaluate the accounts that I still use: can I unfollow/unfriend people/profiles? Delete/minimize the amount of information feeding my timeline.
  6. Repeat step 5 regularly (I did every 2 months from 2016 to 2018).

The idea was to be less distracted by minimizing the amount of information I was receiving. It is a curating process, and it takes a while. Every time I was in the “deleting” mode I wondered if I really needed to receive that update from a particular profile.

My plan for each account looked like this:

1) Facebook

2) Instagram

3) Pinterest

4) Twitter

5) Google +

The Results


twitter

instagram

1) Facebook

2) Instagram

3) Pinterest

This one was a long process. I started deleting boards I wasn't updating anymore. From 2016 to 2017 I was still deleting boards.

4) Twitter

5) Google+

The Numbers — Summary!


So, I still have Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Throughout my curating process I mainly registered the number of following profiles or friends I had. My summary log for the past 3 years looks like this:

Social media accounts I follow

As a result I minimized my social media inputs by:

This reduction cut down my FOMO feelings and since I kinda knew which type of information I was getting from each account, I could use them more mindfully. Also, I feel less overwhelmed by not being bombarded with information.

The only social media app installed on my phone right now is Instagram.

I only log into Facebook to check out my Groups discussions once or twice a week.

I still log in to check Twitter 3-4 times a week. The best part in having less than 100 following accounts is that I get fewer information on my Timeline and it drastically reduces the time I spend scrolling each time I access it.

What's next?


I am still reflecting on how useful social media is to me. After this decluttering process, I feel like I really don't need it as much I thought I did.

I still want to experiment deleting or suspending my accounts to see what happens. More and more I feel that I prefer to consume less and in a more curated way.

Food for thought: should I delete my social media accounts?

#attentionresistance #socialmedia #digitalminimalism

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By Noisy Deadlines Minimalist in progress, nerdy, introvert, skeptic. I don't leave without my e-reader.