Your cart is currently empty.
Social media is sometimes a bit of a dirty word in Australia these days, despite how utterly ubiquitous it is.On the one hand, it can make our lives objectively better: it helps us stay in touch with loved ones, discover new experiences and makes organising social events a doddle (a Facebook event sure beats handing out party fliers…) For many of us, it’s also become essential and beneficial for our livelihoods – and not just for influencers.At the same time, many Aussies would readily admit that social media can also be terrible for our mental health. From the pressure of having to be ‘always online’ to the cavalcade of impossible beauty standards our feeds throw at us, social media truly is a double-edged sword.But it’s not just our mental health that social media sometimes impacts. Turns out it’s our relationships as well. DMARGE recently completed its inaugural ‘Men’s Matters’ Survey in partnership with Hoop Research – an annual study to better understand the expectations and pressures of work, lockdown and relationships on men – and some of our findings were rather startling.In particular, over a third of men surveyed (34%) feel as if social media has negatively impacted their relationships, with over two thirds (68%) also sharing that they feel that online apps have made dating less enjoyable.
- What Women Find The Most Attractive In Men, According To Science
- Men Reveal What Really Stops Them From Committing To A Relationship
The post Negative Impact Of Social Media Goes Beyond Australians’ Mental Health, Study Reveals appeared first on DMARGE Australia.