I must admit, I use them ironically. I use
them with such intense and mounting frequency on a Monday-to-Saturday basis
that I wonder at what point my already onion-skin flimsy ‘irony’ defense will
stop pulling through for me.
But, somewhere in the middle of the myriad
flashing newscreens with #KashmirFloods
or #NepalQuake flying about, I
realised how the constant appearance of this tiny little ‘formerly known as the
number sign’ sign was degrading the very crisis it so wished to draw attention
to. In order to create a cult of social uprising, it had summed up the sudden
upheaval of thousands of playgrounds, living rooms, bus stops and kids eating
their lunches in a succinct little hashtag meant to garner heaps and heaps of…well,
something.
People are banding together righteously
with sanitizer-pure intentions, raising their fingers both in blame (Indian
media, Nepali government, basically anyone
since we can’t quite be yelling at tectonic plates in all our sanity) and in Tweets
of allegiance—to help, to fix, to restore normalcy…
While Tweeters and Facebookers galore chirrup
away with their #HashtagsOfHope, the sufferers continue to suffer, submerged in
waist-deep water, or scrambling for any semblance of a meal because the umpteen
donations of 200,000 kgs of rice and dal have been stuck at customs for an
eternity. I reach a point of detachment when words begin to sprinkle across my
feed in a shade I have dubbed ‘Facebook-Blue’ with spirited words of optimism
that ring well-meaning, but too hollow not to take lightly.
Sometime, the ludicrousness of the whole
situation strikes me when, in cases like the media filming the farmer’s suicide
that happened last month, I see a post that says. “Media is sick. Can’t believe
they would do this. All my support to the farmer’s family. Justice will prevail
#Hanginthere.”
Normally, my personal prejudice always adds
extra IQ points to anyone that chooses to speak sans text-lingo on social
media, but in this case I’ll have to whittle it down to a deduction regardless.
On a sick, detached level, the irony amuses me, but for the most part, this
post depresses me deeply.
This hashtag fixation bothers me on the
double when it’s used in times of crises, but it’s as irksome on the day-to-day
as well. People are never deterred from the delicious prospect of throwing a
hashtag out into the universe—anything from a personal injury to a breakfast
item is subject to the hashtaggian tyranny of (as one hilarious Channel V
venture dubbed us) the ‘Yo’ generation.
I yearn for the point in time where the
contruction of a sentence was possible without this desire to pander to your
own ego by padding it with likes. When you could say ‘It’s been a great day at
the beach!” without it essentially becoming “#sun #sand #beachlove
#bestholidayever #can’teverydaybelikethis #palmtree #newbikini #beachbodyready
#lovinmylife”.
Perhaps my collective of friends is right. Perhaps
I am an old soul, best left to stew in outrage at those ‘darned kids with
smartphones and Twittery jibber jabber’, but I’d rather be outdated with a
clunky Nokia and no Instagram account (gasp! Sputter! OMG!) than a 40-something
who looks back at her 24-year old self and wonders what on earth she was thinking when she hashtagged the bejeezy out of every
natural calamity and/or piece of office stationary. I’d prefer to have #NoRegrets.
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