Monday, September 15, 2025

Why Social Media is addictive, and some tips to balance it

Opinion | Why Social Media Is Addictive Like Gambling





Scroll. Refresh. Click. Like. Repeat.

It’s a cycle most of us know too well — not because we’re weak, but because social media was designed that way. In many ways, your phone is not just a device. It’s a slot machine in your pocket. Each notification, each swipe, each heart is a pull of the lever, promising the chance of reward. Sometimes you win; sometimes you don’t. But the very uncertainty — the thrill of *what if* — is what keeps you coming back.

Psychologists call it “variable reward,” the same mechanism that makes casinos profitable and gamblers restless. But instead of coins and flashing lights, our digital jackpots come in the form of likes, shares, and little red icons.


To understand why social media is so addictive, we need to look at the key levers being pulled — some obvious, others subtle, but all remarkably effective:

1. Dopamine Rewards — The Thrill of the Unknown

The unpredictability of likes and notifications triggers dopamine, the brain’s “reward chemical.” Research at Harvard Medical School shows that unpredictable rewards are more addictive than guaranteed ones. (It’s like playing bingo at the lamay — you never know if the next number completes your card, but the possibility excites you.)


2. Endless Design — The Scroll That Never Ends

Infinite scroll and auto-play trap us in loops. A 2019 study from the University of Hamburg confirmed that people exposed to endless feeds underestimate time spent by as much as 50%. (*We think “isa pa bago matulog,” but suddenly it’s 2 a.m.*)


3. Social Validation — Hearts as Currency

Humans crave belonging. Social media weaponizes this by turning approval into visible numbers. In a Filipino context, where pakikisama and collective belonging run deep, digital validation can feel more irresistible than a face-to-face compliment.


4. Comparison Culture — The Trap of Highlight Reels

We compare our messy realities with others’ curated feeds. Stanford researchers found that even brief exposure to idealized Instagram posts can reduce self-esteem and increase depressive symptoms. In the Philippines, where hiya (shame) shapes behavior, these comparisons can magnify inadequacy.


5. Hijacked Time — Life Lost in Minutes

A Microsoft study revealed the average human attention span dropped to 8 seconds — shorter than a goldfish. Globally, this erodes productivity and focus. Locally, it quietly steals moments once reserved for family dinners, Sunday family bonding, and siesta. The cost isn’t just hours, but connection and rest.



The good news: we are not powerless. Just as technology exploits psychology, we can use awareness and intentional habits to reclaim our time and attention. These are 5 ways to reclaim autonomy:


1. Set “Friction Points.

Delete apps from your home screen or disable push notifications. A Cornell University study shows that increasing effort — even a single extra step to access an app — reduces compulsive use.


2. Follow the 20-Minute Rule.

Allocate fixed slots in your day to check social media, like after lunch or dinner. Research from the University of Chicago found that “time-boxing” digital activity significantly reduces mindless scrolling. Use a timer if needed - handy on your smartphone -- name it as "stop scrolling now!" set to 20 minutes


3. Replace, Don’t Just Remove.

When you cut screen time, fill it with something tangible: walking, reading, journaling, or talking to a friend. Otherwise, the brain defaults to the habit. Filipino values of bayanihan and pakikipagkapwa remind us that shared, offline experiences matter.


4. Practice “I'll be Off the Grid"

Take one day a week (or even half a day) completely offline. MIT studies show that short but regular digital detoxes lower anxiety and improve concentration. Think of it as a modern pahinga for the mind.


5. Curate, Don’t Just Consume.

Follow accounts that educate and uplift, not just entertain or provoke envy. Studies from the University of Pennsylvania suggest that intentionally curating your feed improves mood and reduces symptoms of loneliness.

---

The Harder Truth

Yes, it’s tempting to say discipline is enough. But if billions struggle, then the problem is not just individual but systemic. We need platforms that respect attention, governments that set humane guardrails, and communities that prioritize human connection over clicks.

Because here’s the haunting reality: every time we lose ourselves to the infinite scroll, it’s not just minutes slipping away. It’s life deferred — laughter unsaid, prayers unspoken, love unshared.

And one day, when we finally look up from our screens, will we recognize the life we’ve postponed?



/admin-O

® billymacdeus.com | follow us on FB The Quarantined Tipsters


Tuesday, September 02, 2025

The Cleansing of Corruption in the Social Media Age

Opinion | The Cleansing of Corruption in the Social Media Age


It used to be that corruption thrived in silence. Deals were struck behind closed doors, hands were greased in hushed tones, and the public rarely caught wind of the betrayals happening above their heads. But in this century—sa panahon ngayon na social media is a breathing creature every second, day in and day out—silence has become nearly impossible.




What once could be buried is now resurrected in screenshots, viral videos, and the relentless commentary of netizens who never sleep. Twitter threads function like digital trials, Facebook posts like investigative exposés, TikTok reels as moral reminders with a million views. Every move, intent, and result is watched. Every lie leaves a digital footprint.

And in this environment, corruption is learning a new, uncomfortable truth: you can’t hide when everyone is watching.


The New Moral Court

Think of it this way: social media is the new plaza, the modern-day town square where ideas, scandals, and gossip collide. But unlike the traditional public square, where memory fades once the chatter dies down, the internet never forgets.

Politicians, CEOs, celebrities—even ordinary people—find themselves held accountable in real time. In the Philippines, kung saan madalas ang tsismis ay kasing bilis ng WiFi connection, we’ve seen how a single viral post can undo years of carefully curated reputations. Integrity, once a private virtue, has become a public performance.

But here’s the paradox: while some people play to the crowd for applause, the truly principled don’t need to act. They endure the scrutiny not because they are flawless, but because they know they have nothing to hide.


A Test of Character

This is the era where integrity is tested. When every click, every receipt, every "like" or "share" can be weaponized, we are forced to ask: Who are you when the world is watching?

For the corrupt, social media is terrifying—a giant magnifying glass exposing their smallest cracks. For the honest, it is liberating. Transparency becomes their shield. Truth, their armor.

Even ordinary workers feel this shift. The employee tempted to falsify reports hesitates: “What if this gets leaked?” The public servant eyeing a kickback thinks twice: “What if my paper trail goes viral?” Magdadalawang isip ka talaga kung lalabag ka, o mananatili kang tapat sa prinsipyo mo.

And maybe—just maybe—that hesitation is society’s gain.


The Future Belongs to the True

There’s a cleansing happening. Not perfect, not total, but undeniable. Yes, misinformation exists, cancel culture is messy, and not all accusations online are fair. But the broader trend is clear: values matter again, not just in whispers, but in metrics, shares, and impressions.

The winners of this era won’t simply be the cunning. They will be the consistent. The ones who build trust not by grand speeches, but by quiet, daily adherence to their values. In the end, those who are true to their principles will outlast the noise.


Integrity as Survival

In a time when social media never blinks, the lesson is simple yet profound: integrity is not just a moral choice—it is survival.

Because when the scroll never stops, when the hashtags multiply, when the people demand receipts—your only real defense is the truth.


__

Question for Readers: In this age where lahat ay pwedeng i-screenshot at gawing viral, do you feel more pressured to live by your principles, or do you think we’ve just learned to act better when the cameras are on?



® billymacdeus | Facebook Page



Thursday, August 21, 2025

saLAMAT




















Gulong gulo ang isip ko


Hindi mapakali, natutuliro

Lalo na kapag iniisip kita
Na laging sumasagi...TAMA NA!!!
iniiwasan kita upang matapos na
Ang mga sakit na dulot mo'y mawala na
Ngunit hindi mabubura ang sugat
Na nagpapaalala na naging lamat
Na ang kahapon ay muling ipapadama
Na tayong dalawa ay bumitaw
Habang sa paglubog ng araw.
Sa bakas na iniwang lamat
Na nagpupumiglas hanggang sa naging sugat
Sugat na nagdurugo sa sobrang sakit...
Na handang tiniis ang pait
Na ang luha ay bumaha at dumaloy
Sa kailaliman ng puso
Salamat sa paalala sa sakit na dulot mo
Handa kong suungin ang bagyo
Upang ipakita sa iyo na kaya ko
kaya ko nang kalimutan ka..
Salamat sa iginuhit mong pangalan
Na bumuo sa parte ng puso ko'y inilaan
Pangalan na nakatatak upang ipaalala
Na ikaw ang dahilan kung bakit nakompleto
Itong kapiraso ng pusong may lamat
Na kahit anong alamat ay hindi na mapapalitan ng pamagat
sapagkat inukit ang mapait na kahapon na tayong dalawa ay nagkalamat.
kaya sinta, salamat sa...lamat.





® Poetry by Kryss Delos Santos
#submissions
#poetry
















Monday, June 23, 2025

You Don't Need To Know All The Answers



Some days you feel like you’ve got it together.

Your outfit hits just right, your hair falls in place like the universe conspired to make it behave, and for once, the world feels like it’s listening.

Other days? You stare at your reflection and wonder, “Is this really me?” The mirror feels unkind. Your skin duller, your eyes tired. You pick at flaws that no one else notices, and suddenly the day feels heavier.

You are human.



It’s okay to feel ugly some days, and cute the next. You’re not inconsistent—you’re alive.

We live in an age that demands brand consistency, even in our personalities. Social media has conditioned us to believe we should always know what we want, always radiate confidence, always glow. But here’s the quiet truth no one posts about: It’s okay to change your mind about the things you once chased with fire. That job, that person, that dream version of yourself. Sometimes, when you arrive where you thought you’d find joy, you discover a kind of emptiness instead.

That’s not failure. That’s evolution.



You may feel lonely even in a room full of laughter. You scroll through your phone looking for something—but you’re not sure what. You smile at stories, heart a few reels, but your spirit is still somewhere else. You wonder, "What’s wrong with me?"

Nothing. Absolutely nothing.

Loneliness isn’t always about being alone. Sometimes it’s about not being understood, even when surrounded.

You might feel lost when your purpose doesn’t look like what you imagined. Maybe you spent years chasing something only to realize it doesn’t fit the way it once did. And now you’re stuck in the gap between what you’ve outgrown and what hasn’t found you yet.

But the gap is where growth lives.



It’s the quiet valley between mountains. It’s where you soften, and wonder, and learn how to sit with yourself. It’s uncomfortable, yes. But necessary.

You are not a brand. You are not an algorithm. You are not a flawless stream of curated thoughts and aesthetically pleasing routines.

You are a person.



You get to feel beautiful on Monday and unsure of yourself by Thursday. You get to change your mind, lose your way, find it again, and be uncertain the whole time.

And that doesn’t make you broken.

That makes you real.

So next time you feel out of place in your own life, remember: even the moon has phases. Even the ocean rises and recedes. And you—like them—are allowed to be different every day.

Because you are human. And that’s the whole point.




-QTPodcast

Saturday, June 21, 2025

Sa Gitna ng aking Pagkabalisa


 


In the welter of my own concerns,
I built a fortress — brick by worry,
roofed with late-night prayers
and ceilings that echoed only my voice.


I wore my struggle like a badge,
thinking mine was the only storm.
But the world — quiet,
kept weeping beside me
and I didn't even hear it.


The woman on the jeep beside me?
Nagmamadali hindi dahil late —
kundi may tatlong anak na walang gatas.
The tricycle driver?
Nakangiti, oo — pero may notice na pala sa bahay.
And me?


Too busy counting my own cracks
to notice someone else breaking.
Forgive me.
I forgot that pain doesn’t compete —
it coexists.


That everyone is fighting their own unseen war.
That someone’s silence
might be louder than my complaint.


So today, I slow down.
Not because I’m cured —
but because maybe, just maybe,
someone else
needs their pain
seen, too.



--billymac © 2025