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接龙文:Beyond the selfie: the true stories behind our most-liked posts
暂定题目:自拍的背后
原文链接:http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/17/beyond-the-selfie-the-true-stories-behind-our-most-liked-posts#userconsent#
字数:1212

(1)Beyond the selfie: the true stories behind our most-liked posts
We asked real people to tell us what was really going on when they took photographs and shared them on social media. The responses were revealing
(2)Scrolling through Instagram, Facebook or Twitter, you’d be forgiven for thinking that everyone else was having a better time than you. But people are much more complex – and boring – than the versions we see on social media. And this addictive stream of positivity has the potential to make us miserable.
(3)A study of millennials found that those who were more involved with Facebook – such as posting photographs, changing profile photos and interacting with wall posts – were more likely to think other people’s lives were happier and better than their own. According to a study (pdf) by the Happiness Research Institute (HPI) in Copenhagen, quitting Facebook for a week improves happiness levels and reduces stress by 55%.
(4)Ursula Goff, a stylist from Kansas, posted a selfie to social media last year showing how she looks in real life compared with the images she posts on social media.
(5)“Social media can make it easy to feel like everyone else is awesome and perfect all the time, but that’s really never true,” she wrote. “We should keep in mind that behind every pretty face or perfect lifestyle is a regular person … In reality, nothing is perfect, life is messy, and people are flawed.”
We asked social media users to share the reality behind their posts. This is what they said.
2016年03月18日 13点03分
1
暂定题目:自拍的背后
原文链接:http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/mar/17/beyond-the-selfie-the-true-stories-behind-our-most-liked-posts#userconsent#
字数:1212

(1)Beyond the selfie: the true stories behind our most-liked postsWe asked real people to tell us what was really going on when they took photographs and shared them on social media. The responses were revealing
(2)Scrolling through Instagram, Facebook or Twitter, you’d be forgiven for thinking that everyone else was having a better time than you. But people are much more complex – and boring – than the versions we see on social media. And this addictive stream of positivity has the potential to make us miserable.
(3)A study of millennials found that those who were more involved with Facebook – such as posting photographs, changing profile photos and interacting with wall posts – were more likely to think other people’s lives were happier and better than their own. According to a study (pdf) by the Happiness Research Institute (HPI) in Copenhagen, quitting Facebook for a week improves happiness levels and reduces stress by 55%.
(4)Ursula Goff, a stylist from Kansas, posted a selfie to social media last year showing how she looks in real life compared with the images she posts on social media.
(5)“Social media can make it easy to feel like everyone else is awesome and perfect all the time, but that’s really never true,” she wrote. “We should keep in mind that behind every pretty face or perfect lifestyle is a regular person … In reality, nothing is perfect, life is messy, and people are flawed.”
We asked social media users to share the reality behind their posts. This is what they said.




