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Brittany Viklund's avatar

This resonates with me in so many ways. I had enough with social media and am deeply grappling with what it means to be online in a capitalist society hyper fixated on consumption. I came to Substack 6 months ago to share thoughts on books, life and plant-based eating. I’d love to dig deeper into some personal things like having an evangelical street preacher father who struggles with addiction and is very likely involved in a cult 😅 but still trying to find the courage to share that part of my story that publicly exposes someone else’s story. I love that you are hear and paving a way for being online with intention but also scratching the itch that led you to blogging to begin with. Also Vermont implant from 2020 too. ☺️

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Malia Z.'s avatar

This was a great read and so resonant, maybe especially for millennials who know a world before the online world came to be. I am not an influencer, but I am a writer of novels and I hate, hate, hate, how I feel I have to sell myself along with my book because that is what gets people to read. A social media following is almost, if not more, important than talent and hard work. It's as though nowadays we are brainwashed into thinking we owe everyone insight into our lives in order to matter, when in reality, we can have beautiful, full lives without these constant outward displays of the highlights. At the same time, I do value what certain influencers (yourself included) bring to the table, questioning the industry, unafraid to discuss controversial issues not for clicks, but because they matter. It's a tricky balancing act, I'm sure, and I am curious to see what the next ten years will bring. Will people start to feel drained and jaded and step away from social media or will it grow even more out of control with the dawn of AI? Sorry for the ramble, but I really enjoyed this one!

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