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Breakpoint

You Are What You Binge

Breakpoint

Colson Center

News, Religion & Spirituality, News Commentary, Christianity

4.82.8K Ratings

🗓️ 23 September 2021

⏱️ 5 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Pediatricians are growing increasingly concerned about an explosion in facial and vocal tics in teenagers, especially teenage girls. According to the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society, case numbers in Canada, the U.S., the U.K., Germany, and Australia have skyrocketed over the last year. They've even called it a "parallel pandemic" alongside COVID-19. A UK journal has reported similar findings.

A significant majority of these young patients report spending a lot of time on social media; particularly a corner of TikTok where influencers with, who themselves have tics, share their stories and show their tics on the platform. According to researchers in the UK, the TikTok videos bearing the hashtagchannel #tourettes boastedhad 2.5 -billion views as of last February.

Doctors say that neurological scans of teenage girls with what they called "functional tic-like behaviors"  don't show the same signs common withas Tourette's Syndrome. While Tthe tics are real and uncontrollable, they are but not neurological, but . Rrather, they are learned over a screen. 

These types of phenomenaon, known as "social contagions" or  "mass socio-genic illnesses," have baffled psychologists for decades. A few years ago, jJournalist Lee Daniel Kravetz published a book called Strange Contagion. Inin this book,which he told the story of a phenomenon atdescribed a Palo Alto high school where, inover the span of just six months, five students committed suicide, all on separate occasions, all by jumping in front of a train. School shootings can follow a similar pattern: the first is widely reported, and within weeks there's another, and then another.  Wall Street Journal reporter Abigail Shrier described a similar phenomenon in her book, Irreversible Damage, about teenage girls with "sudden-onset gender dysphoria." One girl identifies as trans, and suddenly, severalmany others have joined hertoo. 

Like the "functional tic-like behaviors" currently alarming researchers now, social media has playedplays a big role in each of these examples. Whether it manifests as gender dysphoria, violent behaviors, or facial tics, there's something about us - especially our younger selves - that is so vulnerable to suggestion and pressure, even to the point of causing hurting ourselves harm. The reality of social contagions reveals something about how God made us.

To put it as simply as possible, we're impressionable people. Proverbs, especially Cchapter 4, repeatedly alludes to this. Chapter 4 We are warnsed against following "the path of the wicked." We are told, "Above all else, (to) guard your heart" because everything about us "flows from it." 

Though we like to think of ourselves as primarily rational creatures, making decisions by carefully and objectively considering all sides, we are far more driven by what we desire than by what we think. angle of an issue. God gave us hearts that are often shaped in ways and by forces beyond our awareness.of which we aren't always aware of.

Marketers know this. We want to wear what others are wearing, and economic considerations go right out the window. Influencers know this. Popular cultural idioms become part of our vocabulary because of them. The fact that there even is a category of people in our culture called "influencers" pretty much says about all we need to know.

Before the Fall, Scripture describes how God "walked" with Adam and Eve in the Garden. The idea of "walking" emerges again in Proverbs. Out of the Garden, we are warned against "walking" with the wicked.  Apparently the problem is not that we are impressionable. The problem is not that our hearts were made to be formed and shaped by others. We were, in fact, made to become like God, by walking with Him. We were to be formed by Him. In a fallen world, that very good way God made us can instead allow us to be twisted us into the image of something corrupt, foolish, or sinful. 

Anxiety-induced behaviors like the tics inflicting teen girls aren't sinful, but they do illustrate the power of suggestion and the way we were made. The most obvious strategy in light of that would be to dramatically limit social media exposure.

In healthy communities, there is support and sharing ofabout struggles, but social media doesn't come with any safeguards, especially for teens. Digital community is not real; . Iit's more of a performance art in front of strangers. Physical community is real, or at least should be, especially in the context of families and churches.

If we are potentially impressionable to the point of harm, then we're also impressionable to the point of health. Opposite of the wicked man, Psalm 1 says, is the one who "meditates on the law of the Lord day and night." This is because the Word of God is living and active. And it's also because our hearts are shaped by what we binge.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You've heard it said that you are what you eat. The great theologian San Augustine said you are what you love.

0:05.9

It's also true that you are what you binge. So let's binge good things.

0:10.3

For the Colson Center, I'm John Stone Street. This is Breakpoint.

0:14.5

Pediatricians are growing increasingly concerned about an explosion in facial and vocal tics and teenagers, especially among teenage girls.

0:23.5

According to the International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society, case numbers in Canada,

0:28.9

the U.S., the U.S., the U.K., Germany, and Australia have skyrocketed over the last year.

0:33.7

They've called this a parallel pandemic alongside COVID-19. A UK journal also reported similar findings

0:40.5

recently. A significant majority of these young patients report spending a lot of time on social media,

0:46.6

especially one particular corner of TikTok, where influencers who themselves have ticks,

0:52.4

share their own stories and show these ticks on the platform.

0:55.8

According to researchers in the UK, the TikTok channel hashtag Tourette's had two and a half

1:01.6

billion views as of last February.

1:05.4

What doctors say that neurological scans of teenage girls with what they have called, quote,

1:10.1

functional tick-like behaviors

1:12.1

don't show the same signs as Tourette's syndrome. The ticks are real and they're uncontrollable,

1:18.2

but they're not neurological. Instead, they're learned over a screen. These types of phenomena

1:24.4

are known as social contagions or mass sociogenic illnesses. They've baffled psychologists

1:30.8

for decades. A few years ago, journalist Lee Daniel Kravitz published a book called Strange Contagion

1:35.8

in which he described a Palo Alto high school where, over the span of just six months,

1:41.3

five students committed suicide, all on separate occasions, all by jumping in

1:46.0

front of a train. School shootings often follow a similar pattern. The first, widely reported,

1:51.4

within weeks, there's another and another. Wall Street Journal reporter Abigail Shrier

...

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