Key Points
- Social media has put a new spin on keeping up with the Joneses.
- Exposure to glorified lifestyles online has left many people, especially young adults, feeling financially inadequate, even if they’re doing relatively well, reports show.
Overwhelming evidence suggests social media has a negative effect on self-esteem.
That’s not only true for how people feel about their appearance and social status, but also their financial well-being and economic standing.
A new term, “money dysmorphia,” aims to describe the distorted view of one’s finances that nearly one-third, or 29%, of Americans say they now experience, according to a recent report by Credit Karma, often from comparing their financial situation to others’ and feeling inadequate.
They have refrigerators, TVs, and microwaves. They’re doing great! Surely it has nothing to do with real wages decreasing and rent soaring. Nope.
It’s the children who are wrong.
So I’m not actually poor, I just have a mental illness? Nice.
Yep, and all you need to fix it is a subscription to Betterhelp. Use code DYSTOPIA for 10% off your first 3 months.
Wanting to own the place you live in is just not realistic. You might think it’s unreasonable that a single room costs half a million, but actually you have just money dysmorphia. Now go pay your rent.
Ah yes, time for the media to explain how you shouldn’t feel bad about not being able to meet your needs and have basic comforts
It’s called being broke.