How Facebook and Social Media Quietly Keep People Indoors
I’ve joined a few mental‑health groups online recently, and I’m amazed by how much support very negative posts receive. Not nasty posts — just hundreds of people replying, “I’m like this too.”
Thousands of people openly admitting they don’t go out.
Don’t do anything in a day.
Don’t have anyone to call.
Don’t get invites.
Don’t take even a baby step out of the door.
And I understand it. I lived it. I know exactly how heavy that fog feels.
But one day, the pain of staying the same became greater than the fear of risking change.
So I started with the tiniest steps — steps so small no one else would have noticed:
Drying the dishes instead of leaving them to drip
Walking up the hill instead of taking the bus
Setting an alarm for 8am instead of lying there, rotting inside my thoughts
Those tiny steps became a new history for me. They energised me. They built momentum. They moved me from wanting to change, to making change, to eventually inspiring others.
So now, when I see those doomy, gloomy, heartbreaking posts on Facebook, I gently interrupt the pattern. I say:
“How about changing just one thing today?”
Because I know this truth with every fibre of my being:
Changing the outside creates rewards on the inside.
Loneliness loves to keep you prisoner — but you are not powerless.
You are in charge of your life.
You can take one tiny step.
And if you surround yourself with vibrant, healing people, you will grow beyond where you are right now.
One small change a day can be the beginning of a life you didn’t think you’d ever get back — a life where you realise you’re not just surviving anymore.
You’re enjoying it.