The Asian Age

Travel: passion or FOMO?

Social media is slowly defining lifestyles, giving rise to clichéd hashtags such as ‘wanderlust’. Here is a look at what makes the Instagram generation so obsessed about travelling

- AVIPSHA SENGUPTA

Despite being around for only a little over ten years, platforms such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram have become an integral part of our lives, developing a distinct ‘social media culture’ and in its wake providing us with a few clichés, such as travel.

While every era has had its share of enthusiast­ic travellers, no other has transforme­d travel into an aspiration­al lifestyle as the Instagram era has. Add to the aspiration­s the peer pressure to make life seem 'Instaworth­y', and we have the bizarre practice of Fakeation or fake vacation where people morph their pictures over exotic background­s to make it look like vacation pictures.

In fact, a 2019 NY Post report talked about a company, ‘Fake a Vacation’, which thrived on helping people, especially influencer­s who seek more ‘followers’, to look as if they are on a fancy getaway every now and then. From famous YouTube channels such as Yes Theory and Buzzfeed have actually taken up the challenge in which they fool their followers into believing that they were out holidaying. Then, there are even videos that show hacks to help people to take fake pictures. What’s more, most of them even succeed in fooling their followers. So what about travelling makes this generation as obsessed with it as going to the extent of taking extreme measures to make it happen or even fake it if it is not possible?

Rituparna Chakrabort­y, a working profession­al and a travel enthusiast who loves putting her getaway pictures on social media, says, “There have always been a large number of people who have enjoyed travelling and clicking pictures.

And at the end of the day, it’s all about attention,” she tells us.

And with the easy access to technology, including good phones and good editing apps, she thinks it is only natural for people to want to project that side of life on social media.

“For me, it is #trending and not a cliché yet,” adds Rituparna.

Quite unlike Rituparna, however, is Yatharth Chauhan, an independen­t content creator, who claims to be ‘done’ with the trend. “The whole concept of putting one's travel online outweighs the idea of travel itself. We'll soon reach a point where travel bloggers will outnumber the travel destinatio­ns itself and that will be a sad and heartbreak­ing recession to deal with.”

Then pointing to pop-culture in playing a role in this trend, Yatharth says, “Two Bollywood films, Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani and Zindagi Na Milegi Na Dobara (ZMND), should be especially mentioned in this regard. Of course, there are people who are genuinely in love with travelling and photograph­y, but Ranbir Kapoor’s character in the film Bunny, singing ‘Ilahi’ as he travels across the world with his camera became the new definition of cool.” Yatharth also believes that ZNMD and other such films have also been very successful in propagatin­g the idea that one absolutely needs to be on a journey to ‘find’ themselves. “Of course, there is nothing wrong about people who connect with that, but there are too many who do it to keep up appearance­s on social media,” he adds.

Apart from peer pressure and pop culture, however, does this trend say anything about this generation?

Sandra Monteiro, a health psychologi­st, explains, “Creating a wishful life online through travelling may be understood as compensato­ry of the behaviour for the mundane routine life that does not come with the package of thrill and popularity. Then comes the feeling of entitlemen­t, which may be interprete­d more as the desire of seeming different from the rest, rather than showing themselves as better off than others. Again, self-indulgence or a petty form of narcissism is fostered by the self-concept that is built based on the appreciati­ons gathered of the grand social life on social media.”

Sandra then talks about the extremes of this trend, which leads people to fake a vacation online. “However negative, it would perhaps be safe to say that it often protects the individual from poor mental health spirals of sadness, loneliness and selfpity,” she says.

So should we encourage such forged pleasure? “Of course not, because soon it will turn into a case of white water instead of milk. A social platform needs to become a better social space,” Sandra asserts.

We’ll soon reach a point where travel bloggers will outnumber the travel destinatio­ns itself and that will be a sad and heart-breaking recession to deal with — YATHARTH CHAUHAN

There have always been a large number of people who have enjoyed travelling and clicking pictures. And at the end of the day, it's all about attention. For me it is still not a cliche. —RITUPARNA CHAKRABORT­Y

Self-indulgence or a petty form of narcissism is fostered by the selfconcep­t that is build based on the appreciati­ons gathered of the grand social life on social media

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Sandra Monteiro, health psychologi­st

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