A survey by the photography site Shotkit asked people in relationships how often they share “couple content” on social media and how happy they feel together. Partners who post three or more times a week were more than twice as likely to say they are unhappy, while almost half of those who never share said they are genuinely happy.
Researchers suggest that when a relationship already feels trusting and close, there is little need to seek public approval online. By contrast, frequent public displays may signal insecurity or an attempt to mask problems.
The results show a correlation, not a cause. Still, they hint that sharing every romantic detail could harm, rather than help, a couple’s sense of connection.
No peer-reviewed scientific study is linked to this survey.
Read somewhere on the Internet:
My sis does this all the time. Posts about how the beach is amazing, pictures of having fun working on the farm, etc. I asked her about it once and she said, straight faced “my social media accounts are for promoting the life I wish I had, not what is actually real. My life is not what my socials show it to be.” I was taken aback and felt very manipulated.
Shotkit – “Time to think twice about posting that selfie online?”
Original survey of 2,000 UK adults aged 18‒50 compares posting frequency with self-reported relationship happiness.
Amateur Photographer – “Couples are 128% happier if they don’t share relationship images online” (24 March 2021)
News report summarising Shotkit’s findings and highlighting the sharp gap in happiness between heavy posters and private couples.
Upworthy – “Couples who post excessively about their relationships on social media aren’t that happy” (28 July 2023)
Follow-up piece noting the same survey and quoting experts who link over-sharing to insecurity.
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