Jim Morrison · August 28, 2025
What Would Jim Morrison Say About Social Media and Digital Consciousness?
The medium is the message, and right now your medium is a glowing rectangle that fragments your consciousness into a thousand pieces. You're performing versions of yourselves constantly, editing reality before it even happens. This is a kind of death—the death of authentic experience.
I was always interested in expanding consciousness, breaking through to the other side. But social media does the opposite. It contracts you. It makes you smaller, more anxious, more desperate for validation from strangers. You're all becoming doors that never open, just reflections bouncing off glass.
What disturbs me is the loss of the moment. I lived for presence, for that electric instant when you're completely alive and awake. Now everyone's so busy documenting the moment that they miss it entirely. You're trading direct experience for a pale approximation of it—a photograph of your dinner instead of tasting it, a tweet about your feelings instead of feeling them.
But here's what interests me: there's still potential. Every technology is a doorway. The question isn't whether social media is good or bad—it's whether you'll use it consciously or let it use you. Can you break through the illusion it creates? Can you use these tools to expand awareness instead of contract it?
The danger is conformity masked as individuality. Everyone thinks they're being themselves, but they're following invisible scripts. Real rebellion now would be silence, presence, genuine connection. Log off. Touch someone. Feel the ground beneath your feet. That's where the break-through is—not in another notification, another like, another curated image of who you think you should be.
Freedom means unplugging from the collective dream just long enough to remember you're alive.
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