
Connected and Disconnected
Did Social Media Destroy Our Communication or Redefine It?
By Dr. Hossam Badrawi
I was sitting at a café, observing a group of young people.
They were sitting together, yet each one was completely absorbed in their small screen.
No conversations, no laughter, no eye contact.
At first glance, the scene seemed like a depiction of the collapse of human connection.
It looked like separation — despite all this so-called “connection.”
But I paused and reflected:
Are we truly disconnected?
Or are we simply reinventing the shape of communication — even expanding its meaning beyond space and time?
A Revolution in Concepts
Social media is not just a tool.
It’s an entirely new environment.
It has changed:
- Who we talk to,
- When we talk,
- And even how we express ourselves.
Emotions are now sent through emojis, opinions through a tweet, and daily stories through fleeting “stories.”
We’ve become constantly connected — yet often completely isolated from those physically around us.
The Hidden Disconnection
What we’ve sometimes lost is depth.
Physical presence no longer means much without mindful attention and true participation.
We’re together, yet each in their own world.
We laugh at the same video, yet don’t look at each other.
We express, but forget to listen.
And yet — isn’t this also a new form of connection?
Through the phone:
- We check on loved ones across distant countries.
- We form new friendships we never would’ve had without these platforms.
- We express what’s inside us — even without the courage to face it head-on.
The shy child became a content creator.
The forgotten elder found their digital community.
The socially isolated found a space to say: “I’m here.”
Turning Challenge into Opportunity
The real challenge isn’t the existence of technology —
But how we use it.
Do we use it to cover an inner emptiness?
Or do we use it as a bridge to others, not a wall?
Let’s make social media a tool for genuine connection — not shallow interaction.
- Let’s make every interaction a real chance to get closer.
- Let’s dedicate pure, screen-free time to those physically with us.
- Let’s remember: behind every comment is a person, not just an account.
In Conclusion
Social media didn’t kill communication.
But it did expose how fragile our connection really is.
The choice is ours:
To remain superficially connected but emotionally detached,
Or to use these tools to create deeper, more human, and more authentic communication.
In the end, a human being doesn’t just need an internet connection…
They need a connection to other human beings.


