Connor Franta is no stranger to "likes" on social media. With millions of followers, he is constantly bombarded by thumbs ups, commentary, and all the reactionary responses that the Internet can entail.
In A Work in Progress, he wrote a chapter about not letting those numbers become the "foundation of your sense of self worth." Within such, he also said, "Our lives are never offline and we're permanently logged in."
What is your reaction to this statement? How do you feel about our current relationship with technology? Do you feel as though, yes, we are constantly logged in and have lost our ability to communicate face to face, be in the moment with those in front of us, etc? How would you/do you battle against this modern day predicament?
In A Work in Progress, he wrote a chapter about not letting those numbers become the "foundation of your sense of self worth." Within such, he also said, "Our lives are never offline and we're permanently logged in."
What is your reaction to this statement? How do you feel about our current relationship with technology? Do you feel as though, yes, we are constantly logged in and have lost our ability to communicate face to face, be in the moment with those in front of us, etc? How would you/do you battle against this modern day predicament?