The Gray Divorce Podcast: Episode 94 The Risks of Social Media During Divorce

Andrew Hatherley |

In this solo episode, Andrew reflects on a recent experience attending Artisphere, a major arts festival in Greenville, South Carolina, with his wife Jackie. After purchasing a nostalgic painting depicting a boy riding his bicycle in the 1970s, Andrew found himself reflecting on how dramatically life—and human connection—has changed in the digital age.  

What began as a conversation about art and childhood freedom evolves into a deeper discussion about technology, social media, and the unique risks these platforms create during divorce.

Social Media and the Comparison Trap

Andrew revisits an early article titled “Facebook Makes Us Sad,” which explored how social media encourages unhealthy comparison.

People tend to post:

  • Their happiest moments  
  • Vacations and celebrations  
  • Successes and achievements  
  • Carefully curated versions of life  

What’s hidden are the struggles, insecurities, failures, and loneliness behind the scenes.

During divorce—especially later in life—constant exposure to these idealized images can intensify:

  • Anxiety  
  • Depression  
  • Loneliness  
  • Fear about aging or starting over  

Social media creates an unrealistic standard that can leave people feeling emotionally depleted and disconnected from reality.  

Emotional Escalation During Divorce

Divorce already brings grief, anger, fear, and emotional overwhelm. Andrew discusses the concept of “divorce brain”—the foggy or irrational thinking that often accompanies major emotional stress.

Social media can magnify this dramatically:

  • Bitter posts  
  • Passive-aggressive quotes  
  • Public complaints about an ex-spouse  
  • Attempts to gain sympathy online  

Even vague or indirect posts can fuel conflict and make amicable resolution more difficult.

Friends and family often join the online conversation, taking sides and escalating tensions further. For long-married couples with deeply intertwined social circles, this can fracture relationships built over decades.  

Adult Children and Family Fallout

Andrew highlights how social media conflict affects not only spouses, but also adult children and extended family.

Adult children may:

  • Feel pressured to choose sides  
  • See painful or accusatory posts online  
  • Witness family arguments in comment sections  

For families already struggling emotionally with gray divorce, public online conflict can deepen wounds and strain important relationships for years.  

The Legal Risks of Social Media

One of the most important reminders in the episode: Nothing online is truly private.

Divorce attorneys routinely use:

  • Screenshots  
  • Photos  
  • Messages  
  • Location data  
  • Tagged posts  

…as evidence during legal proceedings.

Examples include:

  • Claiming financial hardship while posting luxury vacations  
  • Posting photos involving alcohol or partying during custody disputes  
  • Oversharing financial or relationship details publicly  

Andrew notes that older adults may underestimate how easily “private” content can spread or be subpoenaed.  

Social Media, Surveillance, and Emotional Stagnation

Another hidden danger is obsessive monitoring.

Many divorcing individuals become trapped checking:

  • Who their ex follows  
  • Where they check in  
  • New relationships or comments  
  • Social activity and photos  

This constant surveillance can:

  • Prevent emotional healing  
  • Keep both parties psychologically stuck  
  • Increase resentment and anxiety  

In high-conflict or emotionally abusive relationships, online monitoring can even become a serious safety concern.  

Dating and Posting Too Soon

For those re-entering the dating world after gray divorce, Andrew offers a word of caution: 
Posting new relationships online too quickly can create unnecessary emotional fallout.

This may:

  • Trigger resentment during settlement negotiations  
  • Hurt adult children emotionally  
  • Escalate conflict with an ex-spouse  

Thoughtful pacing and discretion can help preserve peace during an already difficult transition.  

Healthy Social Media Habits During Divorce

Andrew shares several practical strategies for protecting yourself online during divorce:

  • Avoid posting negative comments about your spouse  
  • Don’t discuss legal or financial matters publicly  
  • Never post while angry or emotionally overwhelmed  
  • Review privacy settings carefully  
  • Ask friends not to tag you in sensitive posts or photos  
  • Limit checking your ex-spouse’s social media activity  
  • Consider taking a temporary social media break if needed  

Most importantly:

Social media rewards reaction, speed, and attention—while healthy divorce resolution requires patience, privacy, and emotional control.  

The Importance of Real-World Connection

Throughout the episode, Andrew contrasts screen time with real-world experiences:

  • Travel  
  • Face-to-face conversations  
  • Shared meals without phones  
  • Exercise and sleep  
  • Outdoor experiences and human connection  

He emphasizes the importance of building healthy “virtuous cycles” during divorce: 
Good sleep → exercise → improved mood → healthier decisions → emotional resilience.  

Key Takeaways

  • Social media can intensify emotional and legal conflict during divorce  
  • Online comparison fuels anxiety, loneliness, and insecurity  
  • Nothing online is ever fully private  
  • Adult children are often deeply impacted by online family conflict  
  • Monitoring an ex-spouse online can prevent healing  
  • Restraint, privacy, and emotional control are essential during divorce  

Final Thoughts

Social media isn’t inherently harmful—but during divorce, it can easily become gasoline on an emotional fire.

For those navigating gray divorce, protecting your peace and dignity online may be one of the healthiest decisions you can make.

As Andrew reminds listeners:

Sometimes the wisest choice isn’t winning the online battle—it’s preserving your privacy, your relationships, and your self-respect.  

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