Shant
Well-known member
I know how you feel, it fueled a major part of my previous major depression.
My advice: Don't delete your account, but just don't really go that often. Or at all. Dissociate yourself from it: "I don't need it", or better, "I don't really get anything out of it.". It might be difficult to get away from it at first, but when you feel like going back, rationalize here: Is there anything you'll really get out of checking facebook now? Over time, you'll just eventually not go as much.
What also helps, is deleting tons of "friends"; primarily, the people you don't know. Especially those you've never made direct contact with in real life.
Ultimately, this will keep you open in the case of making a real life friend and him/her wanting to chat with you on facebook, but will keep you independent from it.
And after all, there's not much we get out of facebook anyways, being social phobic and not even knowing as many people as the non-social phobic.
My advice: Don't delete your account, but just don't really go that often. Or at all. Dissociate yourself from it: "I don't need it", or better, "I don't really get anything out of it.". It might be difficult to get away from it at first, but when you feel like going back, rationalize here: Is there anything you'll really get out of checking facebook now? Over time, you'll just eventually not go as much.
What also helps, is deleting tons of "friends"; primarily, the people you don't know. Especially those you've never made direct contact with in real life.
Ultimately, this will keep you open in the case of making a real life friend and him/her wanting to chat with you on facebook, but will keep you independent from it.
And after all, there's not much we get out of facebook anyways, being social phobic and not even knowing as many people as the non-social phobic.