What I Got in Return for Deleting my Facebook (2024)

If you came to this post because you think there is some kind of giveaway going on, I’m sorry to disappoint you. There isn’t. I did receive several gifts in exchange for deleting my Facebook, but no one gave them to me. They sort of materialized as a natural consequence of opting out.

What I Got in Return for Deleting my Facebook (1)

I deleted my Facebook because I felt that it was wasting my time. We don’t have a lot of time, you see, only a limited number of years, weeks, minutes. I didn’t want to spend any more of my minutes on Facebook, so I deleted it. I thought about the accumulation of all those minutes spent scrolling through things I don’t actually care about, in hopes of coming across something I did care about. How many posts of lunches, political views, pictures of kids doing mundane things did I waste my minutes on? Imagine what I could do if I got those minutes back each day. I’m learning German, for starters.

The reclaiming of my time was a pleasant side effect of deleting Facebook, but the biggest change I’ve noticed is that I got my brain back. By brain I mean my attention span, my ability to concentrate, my level of attachment to my phone. I think most people do not realize how compulsive social media makes you. It was engineered that way on purpose. The more you “engage,” the more ads you see and the more money they make. They need you to be hooked, to check your phone like you have OCD, because your attention is the product they sell to advertisers. We get addicted to social media QUICKLY, and by design. I think most of us are addicted, even though few would admit it. Most of us check our phones multiple times per day, not five or ten, but closer to a hundred, or even in the hundreds, depending on our level of engagement with social media.

I had already been off Instagram for months when I deleted Facebook, but Facebook was the platform I was most involved with. When it was gone, I had no real reason to check my phone because I knew there was nothing on it. It would ring if anyone called me, and who calls anymore? All of a sudden this tether from my hand to my phone, and more importantly my attention to my phone, was severed. I was free from the tyranny of the cell phone. I could leave it in the car, leave it at home, leave it in the living room if I had to pee. There was nothing on it of interest, and therefore no need to tirelessly tote it around.

I noticed after a few weeks that my brain was far more peaceful in multiple ways. First, I had no FOMO (fear of missing out). I had no idea what other people did that day unless I saw them and they told me. I did not have a front row seat into other people’s lives like I used to, and with that came a new level of contentment with my own life. You can’t feel bad about missing out if you don’t know what’s going on. You may think that isolating myself is causing me to miss out on cool opportunities, but I do cool stuff all the time anyway. I ride horses, hike, kayak, drive up to the mountains, host friends from overseas, all with no connection to social media. I’m very content with these experiences because I’m not comparing them to other people’s experiences.

Secondly, I no longer feel a compulsion to package my life into bite sized, easily digestible pieces for display on social media. I feel no need to commodify my experiences, to frame them in a coherent way, or to come up with a caption to go along with a picture. I am LIVING my life instead of documenting it like a film-maker. The cell phone has an eery way of turning us all into voyeurs, even of our own lives. We become obsessed with packaging our lives in a marketable way, a way that gains likes and followers.

Blogging is a way of sharing, but it happens much less often and I don’t find that it dominates my life the same way as Facebook or Instagram. I write about a particular topic, or a certain trip I took, instead of constantly being on the lookout for little moments that would make good social media posts. Put simply, blogging is less invasive.

What I Got in Return for Deleting my Facebook (2)

Finally, and perhaps best of all, I have noticed a kind of zen brain I didn’t know I was capable of cultivating. Since I am no longer tied to my phone, I can sit and look at the world around me without that nagging urge to check my phone. Our brains get used to the pace of scrolling. A new image or idea every fraction of a second- political post, news article, funny cat video, picture of cute kid, someone’s grandma died, there’s an event this Saturday, someone is on vacation in the Bahamas, and the list is endless. We scroll through unrelated posts that make us feel a variety of emotions from anger to sadness to jealousy, all in a frighteningly small amount of time. Our brains are not designed for this. We are not designed to process information that quickly but, once we learn, we adjust. Our brains crave stimuli constantly, the way an addict craves a hit.

Have you been in the waiting room of a doctor’s office lately? Nobody is looking at the magazines. Everyone is on their phones, and the kids are on tablets. No one can sit quietly without looking at their phone anymore. We can’t sit through a red light, we can’t go to the bathroom, we certainly can’t sit for 30 minutes in a waiting room. People used to read books to pass the time. Now they scroll through social media.

My ability to sit still and just “be” has vastly improved since I deleted Facebook. The other day I sat in an armchair with a pair of binoculars and watched birds for AN HOUR. A whole hour! I was completely engrossed in watching them forage for seeds, flit around, rest on a branch and chase each other away. I didn’t recognize a few of them, so I got out my phone and used an app called Merlin Bird ID to identify them. It’s not that I’m anti-technology. I just feel that my phone should serve me, not the other way around. While bird watching, I felt a profound sense of peace and connection to the earth. Birds are pretty cool, and I’m just getting into learning about them and trying to identify the ones I see around my yard and the barn. Sitting quietly and watching them, rather than being a waste of time like I feel social media is, was a wonderful way of quieting my mind and forging a deeper connection with my little patch of grass in the center of suburbia. It was healing.

What I Got in Return for Deleting my Facebook (3)

A few days ago I sat on an upside down bucket in one of my horse’s stalls and watched him eat for about 25 minutes. I just watched him chew, listened to him snuffle and sigh, and enjoyed a quiet moment with him. When I was still on Facebook, I would have looked at my phone, inevitably been drawn into scrolling through my news feed, and missed out on a time of rest. My brain would have been active, frantic. Watching my horse eat was wonderful in the same way as watching the birds. I was quiet, my brain was still, I felt at peace.

In our society, I feel that peace is hard to come by. I’ll take what I can get, even if it means dropping out of social media.

What I Got in Return for Deleting my Facebook (2024)

FAQs

How many reports to delete a Facebook fake account? ›

The number of times something is reported doesn't determine whether or not it's removed from Facebook. We use the same guidelines each time we review whether a profile goes against our Community Standards.

What are the consequences of deleting Facebook? ›

If you delete your account:
  • You can't regain access once it's deleted.
  • We delay deletion a few days after it's requested. ...
  • Some information, such as messaging history, isn't stored in your account. ...
  • Copies of some material (example: log records) may remain in our database but are disassociated from personal identifiers.

How do you feel after deleting Facebook? ›

I've noticed that since deleting my social media accounts, I live more in the moment than I did before. I've discovered the freedom to enjoy interacting with people — especially my family — without feeling the pressure to take the perfect photo or find the exact right hashtag to accompany an image.

Will I feel better if I delete Facebook? ›

The authors checked in with them regularly via text to see how they were feeling during the cleanse. “Deactivation caused small but significant improvements in wellbeing, and in particular on self-reported happiness, life satisfaction, depression, and anxiety,” they concluded.

How many reports does it take to ban an account? ›

So deleting an account does not depend on how many people have reported it. It depends on the severity of rules they have broken. Sometimes even a single report is enough to close an account if it is against the terms and conditions of Instagram. Instagram reviews each case being reported and then they make a ruling.

Can a fake Facebook account be traced back to you? ›

Yes, in certain situations, law enforcement can trace a fake Facebook profile, especially if it's involved in illegal activities. They can request information from Facebook through legal channels, such as a subpoena or search warrant, as part of a criminal investigation.

Does deleting a Facebook post delete it everywhere? ›

Delete Post: Removes the post from Facebook entirely. Keep in mind that you can only delete stories that you've posted.

What happens to Facebook on March 5, 2024? ›

On March 5, 2024, Facebook, Messenger, and Instagram stopped working everywhere. This happened at 3:00 PM UTC. Meta Platforms, the company that owns these apps, talked about the issue at 3:30 PM UTC. A website called Downdetector received 300,000 reports about the problem.

What is the difference between deactivating and deleting Facebook? ›

The biggest difference between deactivating and deleting a Facebook account is that deactivating your Facebook account gives you the flexibility to return whenever you wish, while deleting your account is a permanent action.

Can people see deleted Facebook? ›

If you delete your account, people will not find your profile on Facebook and people won't be able to search for your profile. Messages with your friends may remain in the messenger.

Why is it good to deactivate Facebook? ›

Deactivating your Facebook will grant you the flexibility to return anytime. On the other hand, deleting your account is a permanent action. When you deactivate your Facebook, all your posts, friends list, and timeline will be hidden and other people won't be able to search your account.

Is it strange not to be on Facebook? ›

Of course NO! You are lucky that you dont belong to the group of peoples who simply waste their time by just scrolling the facebook and instagram feed every minute.

Why is deleting a Facebook account so difficult? ›

Social media outlets make money off of you and your information, so it shouldn't come as a surprise that they don't want to let you go. Because of this, the biggest networks have made it overly complicated to delete your account.

Why is it so hard to quit Facebook? ›

On Facebook, the many friend networks we've made along our paths through life converge, creating a unique kind of emotional infrastructure that's impossible for some people to fully separate from, because it means cutting off their only remaining ties to parts of their pasts, or to previous places they have lived, or ...

Can I report a fake Facebook account to the police? ›

If you believe that what was said or posted about you on the fake profile is of a criminal nature (e.g., a threat or a hate crime) or violates your civil rights (e.g., defamation of character or libel), contact local law enforcement so that they can investigate.

Does Facebook do anything about reports? ›

We take things down from Facebook if they go against our Community Standards. If we don't take down something that you reported, you can still use your settings and preferences tools to control your experience on Facebook.

Is Facebook cleaning up fake accounts? ›

Fake accounts (an account where someone is pretending to be something or someone that doesn't exist) go against our Community Standards, and Facebook can remove them.

Can police get deleted Facebook account? ›

How can the police get the IP address of a deactivated Facebook account? If for some reason they can get a warrant, or something similar, they can ask Facebook to let them examine all aspects of a deactivated account. That might include images, texts and commentaries on postings.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rob Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 5849

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rob Wisoky

Birthday: 1994-09-30

Address: 5789 Michel Vista, West Domenic, OR 80464-9452

Phone: +97313824072371

Job: Education Orchestrator

Hobby: Lockpicking, Crocheting, Baton twirling, Video gaming, Jogging, Whittling, Model building

Introduction: My name is Rob Wisoky, I am a smiling, helpful, encouraging, zealous, energetic, faithful, fantastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.