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Leaving Socials magazine
Hi everyone 🫡 Our community has its own magazine at leavingsocials.com. Every day we share tips, strategies, and real-life experiences about reducing social media use, managing the stress and anxiety it causes, and finding better ways to spend your time. The platform can be accessed on mobile anytime, so you will never miss useful guidance. I would also appreciate it if you share posts or videos from others on this topic, so we can collect all the useful information in one place. How to create a post that works? 1. Share a topic that sparks discussion or provides insight 2. Add a visual (pictures or videos) to make it engaging 3. Focus on one meaningful post rather than many shallow ones Join now and help others reclaim their time in Leaving Socials 🙏
Don't force
Even if someone calls you a little bunny, Even if you have no money, Even if you should follow the crowd, Even if your mind is too loud, Even if you should run, Even if you are having fun, Even if you fell in love, Just be, you are enough.
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Don't force
Mini-game for inner peace and self-love 🧘‍♂️
If this message found you, the universe is giving you a clear sign that it is time to do something with your life. I have a game for you, and if you truly love yourself, you will go and do it right now instead of putting it off for later. Immediately after reading this, close Skool, leave your phone at home because you do not need it, and head out for a thirty minute walk. As soon as you step out the door, look around and within thirty seconds pick up a magic object that catches your attention. It could be a leaf, a stone, a seashell, or even a beer cap. Take the object with you and charge it through yourself with positive energy. Pass it from hand to hand, feel it with your eyes closed, and try to determine its temperature. If it is cold, warm it up, and if it is warm, cool it down. Look through it toward the sun and keep charging it until it is one hundred percent full of energy. Next, shift your focus from the charged object to your surroundings and start looking for the person who is meant to receive it. Be careful not to just give it to the first person you see the moment you realize how silly this might feel. Truly try to pay attention to who is subconsciously attracting that magic object. At first, it will be difficult and you will have a tendency to judge the people around you. You will start to notice that you would give the object to some people easily while you would rather pass others by to avoid embarrassment. Try to overcome this as soon as possible and perceive who your energetically charged object is calling out to. Finally, just walk up to that being and place the item in their palm. Say nothing and explain nothing, just smile, wink, and accept their reaction as you would a social media like. Then come back here and share what object you found, how and with what you charged it, who you gave it to, and what kind of imaginary emoji reaction you received. I already did this for the first time yesterday and it is at the very least great fun. As I finish writing this, I am going to repeat it again and I will share today's experience later.
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Mini-game for inner peace and self-love 🧘‍♂️
Second attempt.
I left my original social media accounts gradually between 2018 and 2023. The easiest one to leave was Instagram, where I had 17,000 followers. I deleted it in 2018. It was relatively simple because I never saw Instagram as a source of income. It was an add on, not a pillar. In contrast, LinkedIn meant something entirely different to me. I had built a network of more than 7,000 contacts there, and it had brought me solid business several times. I valued it. That is why I only deleted LinkedIn in 2023, and it was the hardest decision in the whole process. What surprised me most was that even two months after deleting it, whenever I opened a search engine, I automatically typed LinkedIn into the search bar. Reflex. Habit. Addiction. For the first six months after deleting it, I felt free. Like a king who had reclaimed his time. But then came a phase I call the "After Delete Syndrome". I started to doubt myself. People around me said I could have just turned off notifications. That I could have regulated myself better. That I had disconnected from the world unnecessarily. And here is the difference compared to other addictions. When you delete your social media, there is no such thing as just one small beer. It is a radical cut. Done. No way back. I began to think they might be right. What if all it took was turning off notifications, not taking the phone to bed, not reaching for it immediately after waking up? But then how do I build my communities? What if someone is spamming? What if someone posts a question I could monetize immediately? At the same time, I was returning to consulting. How do I let people know what I do and who I do it for if I do not broadcast it? So I created the accounts again. And that was even more absurd than deleting them the first time. From someone who used to get 100,000 views on a post, I became someone barely reaching a hundred strangers. I told myself I am capable. I started training the algorithm again, publishing, testing. It worked. One post crossed 1,000 views within 24 hours. And in that exact moment, it hit me again.
Second attempt.
Nobody missed you (and that’s the best news you’ll hear today)
Have you ever felt like when you take a break from social media, the entire internet stops and waits for your grand return? That’s the "I’m back" expectations. The truth is harsh: Most people didn't even notice you were gone. It might sound depressing, but it’s liberating. Because if no one is watching, you don't have to perform. The problem starts the moment you return and expect a fanfare. When it doesn't happen, you start to: - Doubt yourself (Am I not good enough?). - Force it (Aggressive marketing, clickbait, trying to "push" your way back in). The trap is that even if you succeed and re-engage your audience, you become their slave. You suppress your authenticity again just to feed the algorithm and the hunger for dopamine. The result? Inner restlessness and instability. Thought of the day: Real freedom isn't about people watching when you return. It’s about not caring if you have to return at all.
Nobody missed you (and that’s the best news you’ll hear today)
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