Cells phones, tablets, laptops, e-readers. Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, Pinterest. On board? I am… well not on all of the above, but enough to be
dangerous.
A friend’s daughter opened a shop on Etsy to sell reproductions of her hand drawn stationery and
paintings. Somewhere in the midst of reading her email and looking at her Etsy shop, I stumbled upon her website,
and from there, her blog. Curious of course, I clicked my way through the site
and came upon paintings of normal sized naked women that reminded me of ancient
Greek art, though I had no idea of what they represented or the young woman’s creative
process. With her degree in art, I assume the subject matter was part of the
curriculum.
Anyway, there were all these little social media buttons at
the bottom of the blog post and, you guessed it, I clicked. I chose Pinterest, expecting to be connected to
her Pinterest page, account, or
whatever. I should have known that you just can’t hop into someone’s private
online space without being friends or
followers, but I found out. When
nothing happened after my click, I had an Aha!
moment, along with heat rising through my body. I dashed to my daughter’s room –
Girl #2 – to inquire into what just happened, though I was 99.99% certain. I’d
posted the naked woman onto my Pinterest
page… or would that be, pinned to my
board?
During my two second sprint, awkwardness changed to a fit of
laughter that lasted at least a minute as I tried to explain what I’d done. Between my tears, snorting, and doubling over, I managed to get the story
out. Girl #2 said, “Come on Mommy, let’s see what you’ve done and fix it."
Fortunately, I was able to locate my Pinterest username and password (one of 500 +/- usernames and passwords…
an exaggeration, but you get the point), and signed in; whereupon my daughter
and I found the naked woman. Because the account is seriously inactive with
only three followers, two being my daughters (Girl #2 and Girl #3), I didn’t
feel I would have to do any widespread social media damage control. Girl #2
showed me how to delete the image and that was it.
By the way, my young friend’s painting is Art, and definitely not confused with pornography… or there would be no laughing; especially because my third follower is a minor.
I was reminded of this episode while dressing in my bathroom.
Our huge mirror over the double sink vanity is a daily poke of life’s
imperfections. Today, feeling confident, I was assessing the results of the Christmas
cookies. Not too bad, I thought. “Butttt…,” I continued to think, “What you see
in a mirror and on a photo is often different,” as I looked at my phone
charging near the sink. And then another thought – “Snap a picture to see if your
‘not too bad’ assessment is justified.”
Next thought: “Are you STUPID!!!” Press a wrong button, end up in the cloud, and you’re fried!
How do you feel about technology and social media? Any stories you care to share?
image found here
How do you feel about technology and social media? Any stories you care to share?
image found here