We, the Facebook generation, were in grave danger of forgetting our emotional capacities. Sensing this imminent threat, the creators of Facebook stepped forward, in a bold stance to protect all humanity. Perhaps they recognized their contribution to the problem? After all, societies opinions were fast approaching Facebookâs vocabulary. We just âlikedâ everything.
And so, a mere few days ago, our feelings returned and we know how to react. Thatâs right, all six of them. With the ‘like, love, haha, wow, sad, and angry’ re-entering us human beings, we were confusedâalmost like weâd forgotten how to use them. So fear not: hereâs a guide to tell you how and when to use the appropriate feeling.
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- The LOVE: Subtlety ainât my suit
âYouâre attractive, and Iâm not subtle.â Desperately trying to win someone over? Is face-to-face love too hard? Once again, technology has spared you human connection. We also may find moms using the love button with an increasing frequencyâbecause of course your mom loves everything you say.
- The HAHA: The Sympathy
Sure, a post may be funny. But more often than not, itâll be a friend trying their best to be funny. So hereâs to pity laughter, courtesy of Facebook. But on the bright side, when we binge watch cat/dog/baby videos, we now habe a more appropriate response than just a like. Because we more than just like it. We ‘Haha’ at it.
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- The WOW: The Owen Wilson Tribute
âWOW, Trump might become President.â âWOW, so you’re saying that if only people took your advice, ISIS could be defeated?â âWOW, her? Really? Wow.â Very rarely is this going to be used for a non-sarcastic response. Make sure that when you speak it, you do it the way Owen Wilson does (as demonstrated here).
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- The SAD: Unmet expectations
Ever click on an article, a picture, or one of those fun âknow who you areâ quizzes? Ever opened it and been incredibly disappointed? Well, hereâs to expressing that disappointment. Because some things on Facebook just make us Sad, and finally, we get to express it.
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- The ANGRY: The last straw
Sometimes, people tend to spam our Facebook accounts. We innocently go to bed, and wake up with 50 new notifications. And theyâre all from your friend Jane, whoâs posted yet another baby picture. Or, maybe, theyâre from last nightâs Maggie’s outingâwhich means these 50 notifications are just the start. Or, even worse, theyâre from another friends post, which you had the lack of presence to comment on, and now youâre notified every single time someone else does too. Damn it, now Iâm ANGRY.
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Clearly, Facebook has helped diversify our emotional ranges. As Twitter user @JQuasto puts it, âGood thing that we have more Facebook reactions so we donât have to focus on using pesky punctuations and a vocabulary.â And you know what, truer words have never been spoken.
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