Embracing Social Media Mindfulness and Minimalism

by | Dec 22, 2024 | Culture & Society, digital minimalism and mindfulness | 0 comments

Over the past five months, I’ve been experimenting with logging into social media once per fortnight. The experience has been positive. I’ve discovered the immense benefits of embracing mindfulness and minimalism in my relationship with social media.

As we head into 2025, I’m taking this commitment a step further: I’ll only log into social media once per month (and for no more than 15 minutes each time I log in). This choice allows me to focus on other aspects of my life, knowing that social media will always be there when I need it.

This decision to mindfully practice social media minimalism has brought so much richness to my life already, including:

1. The opportunity to use social media with mindfulness, discipline, and intentionality.
2. A fresh perspective on how social media contributes to today’s polarisations and destructive politics.
3. Space from the noise, narcissism (or, at least, self-absorption), misinformation, disinformation, and nastiness that saturate social media.
4. Enhanced emotional and spiritual well-being and peace.
5. Choosing to relinquish self, or at least the aspects of self that get in the way of God.
6. Freedom from digital addiction and dependency.
7. More time for the things that nourish my soul: reading, praying, meditating, exercising, and so much more.
8. A deeper focus on in-person relationships with family, friends, and neighbors—the connections that truly matter.
9. Other benefits that come from stepping back and realigning priorities.

This approach won’t suit everyone, and that’s okay! We all have different ways of engaging with the world. But I’ve found that a little more mindfulness in life can go a long way, and this practice is one way I’m embracing that truth. Social media mindfulness and minimalism can go a long way to a more fruitful, intentional, happy, mindful, Christlike life.

I’ll write a fuller post at the end of 2025 exploring what I’ve learned from this mindfulness practice.

Here’s to a more intentional, connected, and mindful 2025!

Graham Joseph Hill

Rev. Assoc. Professor Graham Joseph Hill OAM PhD serves as Mission Catalyst for Church Planting and Missional Renewal with the Uniting Church in NSW and ACT, Australia. Previously, he was the Principal of Stirling Theological College (Melbourne) and the Vice-Principal and Provost of Morling Theological College (Sydney). Graham is Adjunct Research Fellow and Associate Professor at Charles Sturt University, and research associate at the Centre for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary in the USA. Graham received the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in 2024 for “service to theological education in Australia.” He has planted and pastored churches and been in ministry since 1988. Graham is the author or editor of 18 books. Graham writes at grahamjosephhill.com

Graham's qualifications include: OAM, Honours Diploma of Ministry (SCD), Bachelor of Theology (SCD), Master of Theology (Notre Dame), and Doctor of Philosophy (Flinders).

See ORCID publication record: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6532-8248

 

© 2024. All rights reserved by Graham Joseph Hill. Copying and republishing this article on other Web sites, or in any other place, without written permission is prohibited.

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