50 Hilarious Comparison Pics Of Normal Photos People Were Afraid To Post And Silly Ones They Did
Interview With ExpertOur relationship with the internet, much like with people, evolves over time. At first, there's curiosity, excitement, and then, of course, oversharing. But the embarrassment it often leads to makes us learn our lessons and... adapt.
A new trend has emerged on TikTok, and it invites everyone to post a recent picture of themselves that they thought might be too inappropriate for social media versus the one they had no problem showing the world in the past.
From tacky effects to cringey captions, the old days were certainly wild!
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I'm finding I prefer most of the earlier pictures. All the other, later ones, look like they're too perfect and are trying to hard to be "instagram-worthy".
It's just the fact that it has Jacob photoshopped in it.
Load More Replies...I always thought the flag of Switzerland was a big plus
Load More Replies...To gain a better understand of what our online activities reveal about us, we got in touch with Art Markman, PhD, who is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin and the author of Bring Your Brain to Work and Smart Change: Five Tools to Create New and Sustainable Habits in Yourself and Others.
"We share personal moments online to create a communal experience that can actually enhance our memory for those events," Markman told Bored Panda.
"By taking the time to record and post these events, we are helping them to stand out from the rest of our daily lives in ways that improve our memory for them and make us feel more connected to our social media community."
So, whether you're 15 or 35, the desire to upload your photo online is understandable. Now, what that photo is is a different story.
They are both nice photos. I particularly like the 2017 one for the artistic aesthetic.
There's a paper published in Psychological Reports that presents a scale to measure oversharing.
The researchers gave a questionnaire to teenagers asking how much of their thoughts, emotions, and personal life events they put online. Then, the researchers asked if the teens enjoyed sharing this information and if they thought there was anything "too personal" to disclose online.
Upon cross-referencing the results with the teens' mental health assessments, they found that teens who shared a lot online compared to their peers had higher levels of anxiety and attention-seeking tendencies. These teens also reported higher levels of worry and an excessive attachment to social media, and many had an "intense urge to post."
OMG, I have a similar photo to the bottom one from the night I did a sleep study. Was not anticipating that many electrodes.
I like the 2016 one better. Love the laser eyes with the 4 elements floating.
Boring, duck lips, super common pic vs silly pic as a kid. Not really a fair comparison.
The oversharing scale that the researchers used was based on a psychological concept from 1973 called social penetration theory (SPT), from Irwin Altman and Dalmas Taylor.
Altman and Taylor thought that "self-disclosure" was critical to how people develop relationships; as time goes on, we disclose more personal information with one another. In SPT, there are two ways to self-disclose: with breadth, the number of topics you share about; and with depth, how deep you go on one topic. Breadth usually comes first, then depth.
Too much or too little sharing can slow down a relationship. We want our level of intimacy with others to be more or less the same—we don't want to share very intimate details when someone does not reciprocate.
Not to be mean but the right one looks like a Wallace and Gromit character.
No she doesn't, she looks like a perfectly normal human, not a claymation character and unlike her present-day picture, she looks real in the 2017 one, not like an overly perfect "instagram-worthy" version of herself.
Load More Replies...IF these photos are of the same girl, and I have serious doubts, then her surgeons and dentists did absolutely *remarkable* work that is natural and fits her face and they deserve all the awards, but it’s gonna take an awful lotta convincing to get me to believe it. Now on to the young girl: She looks happy and confidant and like a nice kid, which is a *lot* more than most kids that age can say.
Sad way to show how much she has internalized criticism about her beauty from then to now.
How do you know that ? Why are 18 ppl just accepting what you said ??? The f is going on? This is a random picture and you created a whole narrative with nothing but conjecture.
Load More Replies...It's not that hard. Just use the can of ultra hold aqua net you found in the '80's and spray your hair upside down.
Load More Replies...But like so many things in life, the internet isn't inherently bad to us—it's how we use it that matters.
"A healthy relationship with social media is one in which it is an addition to your life without being a distraction from it," Markman said. "When you find yourself engaging more with your virtual friends than the actual people in your life, then you will want to scale back.
"In addition, it is natural to compare your life to the ones you see portrayed in your social media feeds. If those comparisons make you feel sad or anxious about your life, then that is another good sign that you should reduce your social media engagement."
??? Is that an attempt to look like Michael Jackson in the 2019 pic?
What the hell sort of filters, or fillers, did she use to remove all trace of reality from the LH pic? Both are heavily edited,.
She needed better definition for the stripes make-up but good try!
You suuure got that backwards, Daphne! 😆 I admit I kinda envy the people and their “confidently dorky” photos, as I’d like have to have been confident if only for a moment, for as long as it took to shoot the photo, and besides, I think they’re AWESOME mementos! I have nothing “awesome” from when I was young. 😞
Load More Replies...Markman said, "The decision of how much to share online is certainly a personal one. But it is useful to imagine yourself six months in the future, looking back on your social media feed."
The professor suggests stepping into the shoes of this slightly idealized version of yourself and asking if you think you would find the amount you are sharing now to be acceptable/valuable or not.
I know someone who looked *precisely* like that, and I’d dearly looove to show it to him and tell him I thought it was him, as I’m imagining him melting into the floor in horror! But I think it’s so absurdly, sweetly dopey!
Load More Replies...I’m wondering whether it’s the same gender? Because yeah, they look like two entirely different people, but if there was gender reassignment, I’d wanna shout “Hell, yeah! You go, girl!” but I don’t wanna if I’m wrong and maybe make things worse. 😕
Load More Replies...I want those jeans but in a size that doesn't demand heels yet fits over my post covid fat a*s.
"As a check on this, go back and look at your feed from six months or a year ago," Markmad added.
"Does the level of engagement and sharing that you see from your past feel right to you, or does it feel like too much? That can be a useful perspective for making decisions moving forward."
And if it is, maybe you can join this challenge.
Clearly she was Dutch and meant 'liefies/liefjes' (lovely ones/loved ones)
Load More Replies...You should hesitate, making a selfie while cramping to hold in diarrhea is not pretty
You should drop a pic of yourself before being a d**k about other people's appearance
Load More Replies...He should keep right on hesitating until he finds another photo, because if he posts the one on the left, he’ll end up in yet another one of these same posts. And I think the one on the right is funny and cute!
She changed THAT much in just three years?! How old is she now?! Man, puberty suuure has some surprises in store!
Most of these "hesitated to post" pictures are just run of the mill, boring, look-how-attractive-I-am pictures that flood social media now, and the other pictures are actually interesting and show real life personalities. People really should hesitate to post the former and more readily post the latter.
I also wouldn’t hesitate to post a photo of myself surrounded by virile, strapping young men! It might be the only time I’d get to do it!
if the roles were reversed and a man posted "I also wouldn’t hesitate to post a photo of myself surrounded by fertile, fit young women! It might be the only time I’d get to do it!" he would be hounded by the internet.
Load More Replies...Second picture looks like it’s from the current Kenco ad here in the UK. “You can’t play here!”
Yeah, it is, *especially* considering how she looks now; I’m imagining the cringing she does when she sees it is painful.
Load More Replies...Gymnasts SHOULD feel confident! The girl on the left is apparently hiding something on her face, so I understand her hesitancy, but the girl on the right is KILLING IT!
Lol I'm guessing they wanted inset day (a day off from school due to teacher training)
Load More Replies...It's getting worse : i bumped into a girl the other day, who was making full on tiktok vids of herself in a public bathroom. Multiple. With enourmous cleavage and duckface and without any shame! She did not even move when she was in the way of the sink! It was the most awkward thing, left me flabbergasted. I really thought it was some candid camera thing, but no
Load More Replies...Why doesn't the phone camera's auto-mirror function re-mirror the mirror image created by the mirror?
There is way too much of that going around.
Load More Replies...Same here. The best I can work out is that she’s on the phone case in both photos?
Load More Replies...So, the theme is as people get older and presumably the influence of social media has increased, peoples confidence and self esteem drops. Got it. Heaven help young people today.
Thankful to have grown up pre-internet & social media. I’m messed up enough from just the influence of my direct peers!
Load More Replies...Yeah; I’m thinking she needs to debate some more, as she’ll be mortified in eight years.
Load More Replies...Put your nasty tongue back in your mouth. I thought that "trend" was dying out (in anyone older than 14 years, anyways). Ick.
Tell me you've never been snogged without telling me
Load More Replies...I am dubious about some of the "hesitancy" in some of these pics.....
Yeah. I miss the days when people looked like themselves.
Load More Replies...Is it just me, or does she look like she's about 12 years old in the right-hand pic, but somehow looks like she's 45 years old in the left-hand pic even though (theoretically) only 11 years have passed between the two?
Not just you. I do wonder how so many apparently young women have been sucked into believing that this sort of 'glamorous' image makes them look good? No, dear, it just makes you look like you're trying too hard to look like an aging celebrity.
Load More Replies...I completely agree. I think we’ve moved on from that and maybe that’s why these girls are having a hesitation in posting the current pics. PLEASE STOP!
Load More Replies...Well the current one looks pretty trashy and low class so I don’t blame you for the hesitation. Hopefully you hesitated to go out like that too.
Nothing wrong with either. Except maybe the dark shoes with the light outfit.
I think I was lucky that there were no 'Social Media sites' when I was younger. I came into using/owning a computer as a fully fledged adult. My youthful mistakes are not on the internet.
When I first started using a computer back in the late 1970s, the internet protocol suite hadn't been formally defined, I'd certainly never heard of the internet, and digital cameras were unheard of (although i did know of image scanners - not linked to computers, though). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_protocol_suite. My youthful mistakes? None of your business. 😁
Load More Replies...None of you were hesitating to post that first photo, and the other photos were when you were happy...
This has convinced my child does not need social media, ever. Both posts were concerning. The ones where they were claiming to have low confidence, most of young women trying to look very sexual. And the innocent earlier photos they were denigrating.
Mmm. Tyranmar, I don't see that any of the "earlier" photos were denigrating. And not many of the "recent" photos were anything other than standard selfie sort of things. To my eyes, not one of them counted as "trying to look very sexual". 🤷
Load More Replies...Seems like all of the newest photos were heavily filtered. I guess the take away is that filters delude people into believing they're supermodels. P S stop with the duck lips, you look ridiculous...
Man, these photos make me feel so old! I thought growing up in the 80s and 90s was bad enough with just media and peert pressure. I can't imagine how much more difficult it is growing up now, with social media influencing every move.
I think I was lucky that there were no 'Social Media sites' when I was younger. I came into using/owning a computer as a fully fledged adult. My youthful mistakes are not on the internet.
When I first started using a computer back in the late 1970s, the internet protocol suite hadn't been formally defined, I'd certainly never heard of the internet, and digital cameras were unheard of (although i did know of image scanners - not linked to computers, though). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_protocol_suite. My youthful mistakes? None of your business. 😁
Load More Replies...None of you were hesitating to post that first photo, and the other photos were when you were happy...
This has convinced my child does not need social media, ever. Both posts were concerning. The ones where they were claiming to have low confidence, most of young women trying to look very sexual. And the innocent earlier photos they were denigrating.
Mmm. Tyranmar, I don't see that any of the "earlier" photos were denigrating. And not many of the "recent" photos were anything other than standard selfie sort of things. To my eyes, not one of them counted as "trying to look very sexual". 🤷
Load More Replies...Seems like all of the newest photos were heavily filtered. I guess the take away is that filters delude people into believing they're supermodels. P S stop with the duck lips, you look ridiculous...
Man, these photos make me feel so old! I thought growing up in the 80s and 90s was bad enough with just media and peert pressure. I can't imagine how much more difficult it is growing up now, with social media influencing every move.
