Has social media broken our brains?: Digital natives
New to mental health
I was fifteen in rural Arkansas. The nearest openly queer adult I knew about ran a salon forty minutes away and didn’t talk about it at church. The internet connection in my bedroom was the only door that opened onto a room where I could exist.
Tumblr wasn’t designed for me. But the community I found there — artists, teenagers in rural England and suburban Texas, a weird cluster from the Philippines obsessed with the same anime — told me the thing I was most afraid of about myself was ordinary. Not brave. Not tragic. A Tuesday. That reframe saved my life.
The anxious generation camp would like me to know social media is destroying my generation. I’d like them to know that their version of concern — where the only story about young people and screens is damage — erases every kid the platforms kept alive. We are not a footnote. We are millions.
The mental health data is real. Depression is up. Self-harm is up. These curves started climbing before Instagram existed. They’re steeper in elderly men, who have the least social media use. The countries with the highest teen social media use don’t consistently show the highest teen depression. The anxious generation camp selected a correlation and built a causation story because it has a satisfying villain.
We’re not saying the platforms are fine. Instagram serving self-harm content to depressed kids is indefensible. But regulating algorithmic recommendation is a policy response. Banning teenagers from the internet is a moral panic dressed as child protection. The queer kid, the disabled teenager, the first-gen immigrant navigating two cultures through Discord — those are the kids who lose when the response to a design problem is a ban.
Where we concede ground: Survivorship bias, literally. Molly Russell cannot write this paragraph.
What would change our mind: A study of marginalized youth in restricted-access conditions showing better outcomes without increased isolation.
Read the full synthesis: Has social media broken our brains?