Follow

Translate

NYC Psychotherapist Blog

power by WikipediaMindmap
Showing posts with label performative lifestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label performative lifestyle. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2026

Confusing Your Curated Social Media Self With Your True Self

What is the Curated Social Media Self?
The curated social media self is the carefully crafted digital persona users present on their social media.

Confusing Your Curated Self With Your True Self

The curated self includes the conscious selection, editing and organization of personal content, such as photographs, achievements and opinions, to showcase a highly favorable version of a usser's life rather than the unfiltered reality.

This phenomenon transforms everyday users into their own personal "brand managers". 

The curated self can take many different forms depending on the intended audience: a professional image, a picturesque lifestyle on Instagram or carefully curated views and opinions on other social media platforms.

The Psychological Impact of Believing in the Curated Social Media Self as Your True Self
Although there are many positive aspects of social media, including bridging geographical gaps, finding jobs, learning online, my focus is on the psychological impact of believing in your social media self as your true self and how it alters your psychology, relationships and self worth:

Psychological Fragmentation
  • Loss of Your True Self: You can lose touch with your authentic emotions, personal challenges and baseline personality (see my article: Living Authentically).
Confusing Your Curated Self With Your True Self
  • Identity Foreclosure: You stop growing because you feel you must conform to a fixed online brand.
  • Hypervigilance: You constantly monitor your behavior to make sure it matches your online image.
  • Depersonalization: You begin viewing your life as only content to be documented online.
Emotional Consequences
  • Fragile Self Esteem: Your mood can fluctuate based on audience engagement and shifting algorithms.
  • Chronic Anxiety: You can live in a state of chronic anxiety due to fear of public rejection, mistakes or fear of being "cancelled".
Confusing Your Curated Self With Your True Self
  • Loneliness: You can feel unloved because people praise the "character" or persona they see online and not the real you (see my article: Coping With Loneliness).
  • Loss of Joy For Real Life: Real life experiences can lose joy unless they generate online validation or metric boosts.
Social and Behavioral Issues
  • Superficial Relationships: You might treat friends like props or networking nodes rather than forming genuine human connections.
Confusing Your Curated Self with Your True Self
  • Performative Lifestyle: You make major life choices based on aesthetic appeal rather than personal utility.  You can reduce real life experiences into experiences that are lived for the camera only.
  • Impaired Empathy: You might view social issues and personal tragedy through the lens of personal branding.
  • Social Media Burnout: Social media burnout is a state of chronic mental, emotional and physical exhaustion triggered by prolonged and compulsive engagement with digital networks, especially if you constantly compare yourself to others on social media and assume that their curated selves are authentic (see my article: How to Stop Comparing Yourself Unfavorably to Others).
What is a Digital Detox?
If you can identify with some or all of the problems mentioned above, you might be ready for a digital detox.

A digital detox is a time when a person voluntarily refrains from using digital devices like smartphones, computers, tablets and social media platforms.  

The goal is not to abandon technology forever, but to reduce stress, curb constant digital distractions and focus on real-world social interactions. 

What Are the Signs That You Might Benefit From a Digital Detox?
Consider stepping back from your screens if you notice any of the following indicators:
  • Reaching for your phone as soon as you wake up
  • Losing track of time while mindlessly scrolling
Confusing Your Curated Self With Your True Self
  • Experiencing FOMO (fear of missing out) when you are away from your device
  • Mood changes like feeling anxious, irritable, angry, sad or depressed while browsing social media
  • Disrupted Sleep caused by late night notifications or screen glare
  • Spending time comparing yourself to others on social media
  • Recognizing you have superficial relationships because you haven't made an effort to develop meaningful relationships
  • Feeling lonely because your relationships are primarily online or any of the other psychological, emotional, social or behavioral issues mentioned above
How Can Psychotherapy Help
Psychotherapy, especially Experiential Therapy, can help by bridging the gap between your online persona and their authentic true self offline (see my article: Why is Experiential Therapy More Effective Than Traditional Talk Therapy?).

Getting Help in Therapy

A skilled psychotherapist can help you to:
  • Deconstruct the digital mask
  • Help build grounded reality
  • Heal the psychic split so you can experience your true self
I will write more about this in my next article.

About Me
I am a licensed New York psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, EMDR, AEDP, EFT (for couples), Parts Work (IFS and Ego States Therapy), Somatic Experiencing and Certified Sex Therapy.

I have helped many individual adults and couples over the years.

To find out more out more about me, visit my website: Josephine Ferraro, LCSW - NYC Psychotherapist.

To set up a consultation, call me at (917) 742-2624 during business hours or email me.