Skip to main content

THE LIFE I MISS

 How Social Media Noise Is Changing Our Values

The world today is polluted with noise; noise shaped by people’s perceptions and beliefs. It overwhelms me sometimes as I try to understand what truly matters in life. Everywhere, there are opinions: “Marriage is not an achievement,” “A man will…” “Women are…”, and so many others. These voices have created confusion, turning everyday life into quiet chaos.

Growing up, I can attest that the noise was minimal. People had privacy, and no one seemed to be in a rush. Maybe it was because I hadn’t seen the other side of the world yet. But now, it is exhausting to witness how much things have changed, from simple to complicated, from calm to chaotic. Sometimes, I wonder what life would have been like if social media had never introduced these endless comparisons and artificial standards.

Today, many people live based on what they see and hear online. They go to great lengths to align their lives with curated realities. “I want glass skin,” I once heard a friend say, someone who could barely afford two decent meals a day. Skin is not meant to be glass; it has pores, it breathes, it lives.

We now live in a world of classifications. Men must be this, women must be that. A man who loves his wife deeply is called a simp. Pink is no longer just a color...it is “not for men.” A man drinking a smoothie is judged. These labels, these noises, have quietly ruined lives.

Some masculinists preach that spending on women is a waste, while some misandrists; mistaking themselves for feminists, promote immorality as though it were normal. In all this, the true meaning of balance and respect is lost.

The pressure to acquire what others display on social media is alarming. People chase appearances, often at the cost of their values. Here in Nigeria, hard work is increasingly seen as a slow and foolish path. Wealth is measured by luxury cars and expensive phones. Respect is reserved for the rich, while the poor are treated like a virus; avoided, dismissed, and unseen.

I miss the world I knew as a child.

I miss when children played freely, and when a stranger correcting a child was seen as care, not offense.

I miss when people helped quietly, without announcing it to the world.

When marriage was not a transaction, and love was something pure and beautifully understood.

When I watch birds fly across the sky, I notice they wear no special outfit, yet they are beautiful. They do not compete; they move together.

Even the neighbor’s cat sits and licks its fur without worry, existing peacefully.

But man; man tries to prove everything. He fears death, yet can take life. He envies, destroys, and steps over others as if they never existed.

I miss simplicity.

I miss when my friends did not judge me.

When I was not dismissed or gaslighted for speaking about morality.

When no one tried to use me as a stepping stone.

When beauty was not measured by appearance, but by character.

Today, the world is filled with noise

and that noise overwhelms me.

—Chidimma Writes 

Comments

This comment has been removed by the author.
I can relate 😣
Life's so toxic and complicated right now
We now live in a world that glorifies intensive noise over morals
And now life has become so shattered
What a sham of a world we live in

Popular posts from this blog

LOVE TALES WITH CHIDIMMA WRITES ✍️

IF WE EVER GET MARRIED… A decade and six years ago, I had this imaginary person I loved so deeply. Someone I had found, yet never seen a solace after long, sometimes dramatic days. Someone to chitchat with in the quiet corners of my mind. I described him like characters in movies; Hollywood mostly. If he was the handsome hero, then he became my imaginary portrait. As time passed, I would wrap myself up in a double sofa, close my eyes, and imagine he was right there beside me. Sometimes I wondered if I was abnormal… or maybe every girl had this feeling and just never spoke about it. I did not know, or perhaps, I did not know how to know. Funny, “know how to know.” I was so attached to him that when my teenage hormones began to bloom, reality tapped me on the shoulder. I realized I needed to be realistic. He wasn’t real. So I took it upon myself to look for him. How toxic. In my dreams, he was more Asian. In my mind, he was the loveliest doctor– a surgeon. In reality, I wavered for a coo...

OUR CULTURE, OUR LIFESTYLE

  OUR CULTURE, OUR WAY OF LIFE By Chidimma Placid Nwaka  INTRODUCTION Culture is defined by the attributes that make it honored and respected from one generation to another. It is the way of life of a people in a geographical setting. Culture is a beautiful reflection that tells about a tribe, region, city, village, town, territory, or nation. It provides details of what is held important and how people live their lives, whether simple or sophisticated, bothered or unbothered. In this article, the different cultures of different people will be explored, and their uniqueness identified. CULTURE AND ITS IMPORTANCE Culture is an attractive blend of different arts that adds color to a specific group of people. It is not only based on a tribe or country; workplaces, schools, and institutions have their own cultures that present value and appreciation. In a quick one, culture is everywhere, irrespective of class or size. Even families have their own culture that everyone holds with ...

MOVIE CRITIC: THE HERD

MOVIE CRITIC: THE HERD Just Like Every Other One, It Reminds Us of the Poison People believe history shapes our lifestyle, and while the stories get interesting, the movies created from them make the connections more visible. The Herd is a historical movie; not too old, just about six years from the real events that inspired its visuals. It is a film that does not intend to hurt any religion or portray any tribe in Nigeria negatively. Effiong Daniel, an inspiring actor, delivered a project that could easily be misunderstood as controversial, especially because it was released during a chaotic and sensitive period in the country. Many critics from Northern Nigeria claimed the movie undermines the region, but the truth is that it delivers factual information in visual form. Bandit attacks, killings, the selling of human body parts, and other dark realities were portrayed, not to demonize anyone, but to reflect what victims actually go through. Just like To Kill a Monkey, The Herd uses st...