FacebookWe are in the year FB 10. Yes there was life before FB. But those memories are hazy. There was friendship in pre-Facebook days and there are friends I have in 2014 then is 10 FB because this is the tenth year since our definitions of friends and friendship has changed.In terms of sheer numbers, at least in my case, the virtual friends win. I have many more “friends” on Facebook than I have in the real world. I have never had more than a dozen friends in the pre FB world. In the real world if you tap someone and say I want to be your friend, you would be immediately stared at by all and sundry for being a weirdo. Life is simpler on FB. I send someone a request and if the person accepts my request the person joins my friend list. There are no awkward questions asked like, “Have we met before?” We already know if we share friends or even interests in common. We say, “We have a few friends in common.” And then we accept that friend request.Have you ever tried to unfriend someone in real life? We are stuck with some person who continues to behave obnoxiously for years. We groan at the thought of meeting them but have no choice but to put up a false veneer of civility. Maybe at best you may think of not returning his missed call that you missed on purpose. In Facebook, you discover a jackass lurking among your “friends”. Just “unfriend” them. You are done. The best part is that the person does not even realize that he or she has been dropped off your planet.Friends in post FB age are deeper. Look at the amount of information we know about each other. Take for instance the sheer amount of information I know about someone on Facebook. Depending on how frequently someone updates their status, I get to know when they brought a new dress, when their dog died, the trips they are going on and even when their relationship status is “complicated”. My friends quote their favorite poets, they share the photos of the books they are reading, the photos of the Burritos they ordered and even when they came back home drunk. In FB10, we judge the depth of our friendship by their response time. How long did the friend n question take to “like” my new selfie or status update? This is the closest we have ever got to sitting with your entire group of friends unblinkingly tracking every move you make.The other day I met someone at a conference. We are connected on Facebook but had never met in person. Through the status updates I got to know that we are both going to be at the same conference and decided to meet. When we did meet, we met like friends who have known each other for a while. We knew what we had been reading, the people whose ideas we find fascinating and the people who we both find annoying on Facebook. So we had already covered some distance together in the virtual world. We had already moved from being acquaintances to being friends.Maybe, just maybe The Police wrote this song “Every Breath You Take” for our Facebook friends… They just wrote it a few years too early.

Every breath you takeEvery move you makeEvery bond you breakEvery step you takeI’ll be watching you

Every single day Every word you say Every game you play Every night you stay I’ll be watching you

If you have a birthday, five hundred of your Facebook friends can send you expensive virtual gifts. How many times has someone sent you a sports car to say happy birthday to you? Or maybe a sheep from Farmville?Online friendships are deeper – would you agree?——————-Join me on Twitter @AbhijitBhaduriRead: The trouble with revolutions on social media


Comments

5 responses to “Are online friendships deeper”

  1. Chirabrata Majumder Avatar
    Chirabrata Majumder

    Dear Abhijit da,I fully agree with you. FB have removed the power distance in acquaintances and converted them in to friends. It also very easy to understand your FB friend’s psyche.Once again another nice write-up from you.

    1. Chirabrata – yes FB is a new medium. It has created its own vocabulary. And its own unique challenges. :)Thanks for stopping by to comment.

  2. Pradeep Joshi Avatar
    Pradeep Joshi

    good round-up. I am curios to know how many of one’s FB friends come to visit you when you fall ill to put a smile on you or just drop in to join you over a cup of “real’ coffee. Or should they? Is there a need for such “personal” interaction?I think we are moving towards a world where no one will speak with another person by moving lips, it will all be speaking through comments and updates. Even at home you would communicate with your children and wife over FB or whatsapp.. isn’t that convenient and time saver? The question, however, is what are we going to do with that time?

    1. Pradeep – you raise the most fundamental question. What will we do with that time saved? But there is no getting away from the fact that the medium changes human behavior

  3. Shilpa Mishra Avatar
    Shilpa Mishra

    In my view, human behavior changes the medium and not the other way around. We are who we genuinely are irrespective of the medium. One is layered in pancha kosha(पंच कोश )

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