Melissa Kruger talks with her friends Hunter Beless and Laura Wifler about the role social media has played in their lives, both positive and negative. They talk about temptations that can arise from social media—from neglecting other good pursuits to inspiring covetousness. They discuss why it can be helpful to take breaks and what red flags they look for in their own lives that show social media is doing them more harm than good.
Recommended Resources:
Related Content:
- Social Sanity in an Insta World
- The Danger of Self-Soothing Through Social Media
- Why I’m Staying on Social Media
- The Disaster and Delight of Social Media
Discussion Questions:
1. What one word would best describe your current relationship with social media?
2. What benefits or positive experiences have you had from engaging with social media?
3. In what ways does your social media consumption feed comparison or discontentment in your life?
4. What would it look like to engage with social media in ways that glorify God and allow you to love others well? What would you start and stop doing?
5. What practices or boundaries could you put in place to be a wise consumer of online content?
6. Have you ever taken a break (or considered taking a break) from social media? What was the experience like?
7. How can your discussion partners pray for you as you consider how to engage with social media in healthy, God-honoring ways?
Transcript
The following is an uncorrected transcript generated by a transcription service. Before quoting in print, please check the corresponding audio for accuracy.
Laura Wifler
Yeah, I would say there’s, like, a very real conscious decision, and that this isn’t just like me being like, Oh yeah, it’s no big deal. It’s no big deal. It’s like, oh no. I don’t want to be like this. Put my phone back down, put it on a counter, put it in a drawer, put it upstairs, whatever you got to do. But these things, it takes real work to be able to control the phone, I think, and I think that we think I’ll take my fast and I’ll come back and it’ll be fine, or set these rules will be fine, but it’s like anything you know you were talking about studying God’s word, Melissa, it’s every day, it’s a choice. Every day, it’s a decision, and this is that decision of not wasting our life.
Melissa Kruger
Welcome, to the deep dish, a podcast from the gospel coalition where we love having deep conversations about deep truths. I’m Melissa Krueger, and I’m joined today by two of my favorite friends, Hunter bilis and Laura wiffler, to talk about social media in our lives.
Melissa Kruger
This is a big topic, and I’m so glad to have you both. Hunter, can you start by just giving a little introduction? How do we know you? I know how I know you, but where can people find you? Tell us a little bit about
Hunter Beless
yourself. Sure. Well, I’m Hunter bilis. I want to, like, start with an introduction of how long I’ve been on social media, but I actually don’t know the number of years, I’m laughing at the fact that we’re still having this conversation, but it’s because social media is here and it’s here to stay, and so I’m so grateful for the opportunity to talk this through with both of you guys today. It’s good for my own heart and I, you know, started online by blogging Long, long ago, and then started a podcast called The Journey women podcast, which is where I still produce podcast episodes where we are seeking to come alongside women and help them know and love God through His Word. I’m an author. More importantly, I’m the happy wife of my husband, Brooks, and I’ve got four kiddos whom I love dearly. So that’s a little bit about me in a nutshell.
Melissa Kruger
And what about you? Laura,
Laura Wifler
yeah, I have been on social media since Instagram opened. So whatever year that was 2010 2011, but I remember the OG days of really bad, filtered food photos on Instagram. Very fond memories of those days. And like Hunter, my story is very similar. I kind of started out blogging to you know, an audience of about 10 people, and slowly over time, my sister in law and I launched risen motherhood, a ministry that has since come to a really beautiful ending, but it was an incredible 10 year long ministry where we just helped share gospel hope with moms, how their faith connected to their motherhood. And through that, I had the privilege of writing a lot of books, and continue to do that. I write for children and adults, and you can find me on Instagram, sharing most of my work at Laura Whistler is kind of like the main place where you can find my work. And yeah, but the most important job I have is being a mom and a wife to my husband and three kiddos. I live in central Iowa, and we really do have cornfields all around our house. You know, it’s that whole kind of vibe. So a lot of fun here, and I’m just happy to be on the show talking about this today, yeah,
Melissa Kruger
and I love because social media helped me see that you had an ice rink. This is so cool. I was like, Oh,
Laura Wifler
see benefits to social media
Melissa Kruger
and living in Iowa view that in Charlotte, no way true.
Laura Wifler
That is all due to my Minnesota born husband, though he is bound and determined to enjoy the winter make us Iowans like it. It’s a very big cultural difference between the two states of how we view winter, and I’m really thankful to him, because winter is much more bearable because of things like the ice rink.
Melissa Kruger
I love it. I love it. Well, so were you both. Was your first social media account, Instagram,
Laura Wifler
probably Facebook. I had the College Address, like one year of college address, and then it went public to everybody else. But
Hunter Beless
yeah, yeah, yeah, samesies. You know, I remember we were required to have a.edu email address in order to get Facebook, and so there were only college students on Facebook in the time in which I got on Facebook. And it was a moment your senior year of high school when you got your acceptance letter from a university that you could actually have like this passage into social media. So Laura and I really were, you know, on the front running end of what we consider to be social media,
Melissa Kruger
was it called the Facebook at that point? Was it? I call
Unknown Speaker
it a Facebook, I think, I think
Laura Wifler
that was the first name, Mark Zuckerberg first name. But no, I think it was by the time we were there, yeah, I
Melissa Kruger
think I was living overseas in Scotland when I first got on Facebook, and it was just this wonderful connection point with other people. I was living so far away, I had this baby, and it was this very isolating time of my life. And so, because the first question. I want to ask you about some of the positives about social media. And one thing I really found for me was it was wonderful to connect with people. I mean, there were a lot of people that I hadn’t seen in years, and all of a sudden they started popping up, and I remember thinking, Oh, they have a baby too. I didn’t know, and we can’t really, it’s hard to remember that world. But when I graduated from college, you just went your separate ways, and you really didn’t know what other people were doing anymore. So for me, it became this, just this is a wonderful way to see what people are doing. Who were my real friends at the time and who had just gone their separate ways. So that was a real positive for me. What about you all? What are some positives that you’ve seen from being on social media? I
Hunter Beless
remember those days, those are like the glory days when you would hit the end of your news feed like you couldn’t continue being introduced to new people, because it wasn’t working like that at that point in time. And I completely agree. You know, now fast forward however many decades. It’s been almost two since I started on social media. I really do appreciate the connections that it has brought into my life. You guys are two of those people for me, connections and friendships that just helped me to think more deeply about certain topics. And I think part of that is exactly what we were talking about in regard to Laura’s ice skating rink like as somebody who grew up in Oklahoma, I never would have really known like that exists. It’s not really something that shows up on movies or anything like that. And so it’s really fun to have just our knowledge of what’s going on in the world expanded and broadened. And sometimes it’s not fun, sometimes it’s sobering. And I think that can be a really helpful thing for us to broaden our perspectives. Like I remember when we moved from, you know, Kentucky up to the New England area, I was interfacing with this whole different culture. And in many ways, social media enables us to do that by following different accounts from people, not only in different places in the US, but all over the world. And I found it really, really helpful to have my perspective broaden like that. What about you? Laura,
Laura Wifler
yeah, well, first of all, totally echo everything you’re saying about the seeing the diversity of the world and all these different lifestyles. And then also, I’ll just say on the flip side of that, this idea too, that social media allows you to find those people who kind of can relate to your very unique situation. You know, I have a daughter with rare chromosome disease, and it presents us to intellectual disabilities, but it’s a very, very rare disease where she’s the only one in the world that has what she has, and yet, through Facebook, there is a group of parents that have gotten together and said, Hey, our kids are somewhat similar. Let’s all talk together about kind of what how this is presenting, what therapies we’re using, what new trials we hear about things like that. And I mean, I think I might be the only one from the United States in that group, because the group is so small. But it’s really incredible that I can find these people all around the world and be united and feel just a little bit less alone in something that can feel very isolating. And so I think that’s just something else that I really benefited from social media is that you kind of realize, like, Nope, I’m never alone. And you feel, you can feel, while social media can make us feel lonely, and I’m sure we’ll talk about that, there’s also this element of it can make you feel less lonely and kind of give you great ideas and insights and new things to try, for sure, and
Melissa Kruger
I tell you all something funny. So this will be, I mean, I think in your world, because your publishing came almost after social media things, right? So when I published my first book, MV, I didn’t even have a Twitter account. Okay? I did. I mean, I don’t even know if Instagram was out. And so one thing that was really hard was to find other writers. I didn’t know any other female writers. And so I can remember we had this little Facebook group called women who write stuff. And, I mean, I think
Laura Wifler
I’ve heard about this before too. Yeah, I love it. This is like a legendary group.
Melissa Kruger
It was this way to connect, and it was so nice because it was this world. I can remember talking to Megan hill the first times we were sending articles off to the gospel coalition. And we were like, how do you think they decide if they take our articles or not? You’re like? Is there some smoke filled room where editors are reading all these articles and just laugh now, I mean, but it was just nice to have someone else to connect with in a world that we were both a little intimidated by and, you know, just to have conversations. It was really, really nice. Whether it’s, you know, particular things with our families. Maybe it’s job connections that we found through social media. It really has connected us in ways that that are social. So that’s the good, good side that we’ve all experienced. Can you can you share any of the really tough sides of social media? What have you seen on the kind of the dark side of this? Platform?
Laura Wifler
Yeah. I mean, especially, I know all three of us really are content creators online, and that can certainly come with different types of experiences and, you know, but even if you’re someone who just likes to view social media, I think there’s a lot of negativity about and that’s things you really have to weigh. And I think everything from for me, just kind of experiencing, you know, you just kind of realize that the world can be kind of mean, and that online people just kind of lose control of who they are and their filters, and they do things that they would never do in real life. And sometimes, as a content creator, you’re also the recipient of those things, and so that can certainly be a tough spot where you have to get something thick skin. But I would say mostly for me personally, just as a consumer, I feel like the fractured attention is probably one of the biggest negative things that has happened to me. There’s so much science out there, I won’t repeat it all, just about the value of deep work and being able to focus in on things. And I know that social media just the time wasted through Hunter you were alluding to this, but infinite scroll, now that that’s out, that you will never reach the end of any social media site. It’s built into every social media site, even the new ones. And I think that that for me, at times I just, I feel like the one thing that I will regret is like I just spent too much time there. I lost track of a half an hour, or I’m paying attention to this when I should be paying attention to my kids, or I need to write, and I really need that focused attention, and I can feel my brain sort of like hit some resistance in writing, and then I want to go, run away and escape to social media. So that is a constant challenge for me. And I think that that’s probably if I were to say, like, what’s the worst thing that’s happened? Like, that element is something that I’m constantly fighting. Yeah,
Hunter Beless
that’s it for me too, you know, just a distraction from what I’m called to do. Like, so what are the primary callings that God has placed on my life? Well, I have, you know, these things that the Lord has called me to do, and sometimes, like we talked about, social media can actually be a help to me in that I have learned skills from social media that I employ in my everyday life that actually do serve my family and help me love my neighbor better. But there are a lot of times in which the distraction that social media kind of brings into my life, disables me from loving others well, from loving my neighbor, especially those who are within the four walls of my own home. So the distraction element is huge. And even when you’re looking to the right and to the left right on socials, like on the screen on your phone, and seeing what the Lord has called other people to do, and they’re utilizing and leveraging social media, maybe, perhaps, to do that thing. But the temptation is for me to want to, you know, try and measure myself up against what the Lord has called them to do, comparison, you know. And so sometimes I get distracted from the what the Lord’s called me to do, because I’m looking to the right and to the left and saying, Well, look at what she’s doing over here, and then I just get lost in all of that, and it’s so easy to do, particularly with the addictive component of our phones. And so I think at the root of it all, though, for me, is the distraction from actually engaging that the work God has given me to do today.
Melissa Kruger
That’s good. I want to piggyback on something you were just saying, Hunter, you know, again, I wrote MV Aviv before I was even on Instagram. Okay, so it was this book on comparison and how that can rob us of joy. And what I realized slowly as I was on Instagram more and more and more was my neighborhood just got a lot bigger. You know, you think about like the grass is greener on the other side. When I got a lot of grass I’m looking at and all of the sudden I realized, oh, families go apple picking every fall. I’m a failure mother. Oh, y’all all put little signs saying, six months, 12 months. I’m like, Oh, I didn’t do that. And I’m watching it with weddings, because I just had a daughter get married, and wow, that has changed the wedding industry. It’s this comparison, right? You don’t even mean to, but you’re like, Oh, what are we supposed to do at a wedding now? Oh, well, you’re supposed to have a bachelorette weekend, and you’re supposed to have matching pajamas, and you’re, you know, there’s just this whole industry. It almost creates what it’s supposed to be, and then you chase it without saying, Do I care? Right about having matching
Hunter Beless
realizing how much we are influenced. We think this is normal, and it breeds so much dissatisfaction in our everyday like present day lives, at least that is for me, that was the number two thing, dissatisfaction instead of gratitude.
Melissa Kruger
Yeah, yeah.
Laura Wifler
As as a real life example of that, I would say I went through. Building my house here about five years ago, five, six years ago, we built a house in Iowa as we moved here. And I was following all these, you know, online interior design accounts, home building accounts, and I could tell you someone’s couch, exactly where it came from and where to find it. And I love interior design. This is truly a passion of mine. So it was like just a really fun kid in a candy shop moment. But it was about a year, two years into owning this house and settling in and kind of calling it done, and I’m like, ready for a new couch? You know? I’m like, oh, that thing’s out of date. And i Honey, let’s move it to the basement. Let’s get another one. And I was just really cycling on Well, this is my hobby. I enjoy this. This is fun, like a lot of justification. And I realized that so much of these thoughts were coming directly from Instagram, because I was viewing all this stuff and taking it and viewing it, you know, next to poetry, next to fashion, next to food, like it’s all just mixed in there. But I went through and I unsubscribed from all of these home accounts, except for maybe, like, one or two that I felt like I wanted to stick with and I was so worried, no, I’ll never find them again if I ever decorate a house. And you kind of have that FOMO feeling, but I did that. And you guys, I can totally tell you that it freed me from so much jealousy, envy, all of those kind of things. Were discontentment. And I like, look around my home, and I’m like, Yeah, I’m pretty I’m pretty happy with it feels pretty okay. I don’t know if it’s in or out of style, and I don’t care, because what I see in front of me, I’m still happy with some not seeing all these like, other ideas of what it should be or could be. And so I like, I always recommend this to friends. Like, if you are feeling those feelings of discentment and jealousy, look at your feet and edit it ruthlessly. And you may think I am learning and growing from these people, like, I understand, you know, oh, I know how to mix metals, and I know, you know how to pick a fabric, and I know how to mix patterns, because I learned it from these people. But the cost of learning and that education was discontentment, and so I had to step back and say I would rather be content with my home, and maybe, know a little bit less in this area, so that I can, like, go off and be faithful, and the other things that God is calling me to,
Hunter Beless
I think that about that a lot with clothing, yeah, for those of us who are, you know, increasing in age, sometimes there’s this temptation to know, like, Okay, what is relevant in terms of style? Because we’re not on a college campus every day seeing, like what the kids are wearing, and I feel that with my own wardrobe. And I’ve had to think like, Okay, what is the cost of being in style? And you also have to think about what’s driving this over consumption, and really the industry. And Laura, I know you’re so passionate about this, the industry that’s behind Instagram, and as consumers, it can feel like this very natural thing like that, somebody that we’re following who has a design account is going to paint their house again. Why are they painting their house again? It’s because, like, everything that they do their their income is dependent upon the changes that they’re making. So we have to be wise consumers, realizing that, like, hey, just because these accounts are changing their clothes, their style, all of this, we realistically, we cannot keep up this pace, and we need to learn to be content with what the Lord has provided for us today. And actually, there’s so much joy to be had there. Melissa, I’d love to hear you talk about that, just all day long, in light of envy of Eve and really how the principles that are there, they have translated over time, right? Yeah, interesting.
Melissa Kruger
Yeah. It’s really interesting. Even when I’m hearing you all talk the visual nature of Instagram, whether it’s our homes, whether it’s what our children are doing or, I’ll be honest here, when I look at my face, I get videoed too much. Is how I feel, and I’m like, oh, in fact, I just last night a friend or a teacher who led our FCA in high school. They’re going to celebrate her, hopefully this will not come out before then. And they wanted us to send some pictures in. And I realized how few pictures I had of my high school self, because it was film camera, you know. And now you know, anyone who’s on Instagram, anyone who’s on social media, anyone who works in certain spaces, is recorded and filmed a lot. And I’ll be honest, it can be harder the older we get to think, oh, it’s not just that. My house that’s out of style. My face is out of style, like it is not Botox. It is not improved upon in any way except some lipstick. And I’m Courtney tells me regularly I don’t have enough on. You can slowly start to feel like, oh, I don’t have anything to say. And so this leads me, actually, to our next question, how do we have to let the truth of God’s word invade because what I know is the Bible tells me there is wisdom and wrinkles and there is wisdom in gray hair, even when I’m dying mine, there is wisdom there. But I can be tempted to think, Oh, you age out. Sense of being able to share that wisdom in certain social media spaces, because you don’t look the part anymore. So what truths, though, help you maintain a healthy balance as you’re on social media? Why do you stay like? Why does the Bible actually maybe encourage you to be there? Maybe it encourages you not to be at some points, but like, how do you let scripture protect your heart as you go into social media spaces?
Laura Wifler
Yeah, I mean, one of the key verses that continues to guide everything that I do is Proverbs, 423, above all else, guard your heart for everything you do flows from it. And you know this obviously, is very relevant to what we just spoke about with envy and discontentment, and even as a creator of like, hey, what am I sharing? You know, what is what is that leading me? What am I seeking, and how I’m creating and producing? And then, as I scroll, am I guarding my heart? Am I being wise? Am I following people that are pointing me to Jesus, and that doesn’t necessarily mean that they have to be a Bible teacher, though I’m thankful that I do follow a lot of Bible teachers that help me learn, but I think there can be a way with a content creator, as we interact with them, that you can sense that there, there is a humility and There is an element of desiring to serve and teach and help their followers, instead of saying, Hey, be just like me, you know, like, oh, I want you to just be obsessed with me or be a fan of me like you can sense that difference. And I think just really being cautious with how I curate my feed, to have women, even if they’re not believers, but yet, like, what is their content doing to my heart? And that’s one reason, practically, I stay pretty far away from the Explore section of different social media sites. So that’s like that little I think it’s a magnifying glass if you click on that. So obviously, sometimes I’ll search for things. I mean, it’s not that I’m never there, but to just randomly scroll, I would say just personal advice, take it or leave it. But I would say that is an area to be really cautious in, because Instagram is trying to get you hooked in that moment, or whatever. If this is Facebook, this is Twitter, whatever it is, whatever you’re using. X, you guys, we have to update our terms. It’s x. We still all go on Twitter. None of us are there. Well, Melissa,
Speaker 1
on Twitter. We’re like, you can’t just change names. It
Laura Wifler
is hard to reprogram that man. But the point being being really cautious, I think, of how we are engaging in the algorithm to guard our hearts and to say, is this, you know, is this reflecting the fruit of the Spirit? Is this something that is is true and beautiful and reflecting the goodness of God’s glory, or is this something that you know just doesn’t, doesn’t point me to Jesus and for what is it? What and what it is for one woman might be different for the next. And that’s important to remember, too, that we each have our vices. We each have our proclivities. And just to kind of know thyself, you know know who you are, and be honest with what’s hard and what it maybe isn’t bothering you. Also, you can feel a lot of freedom too. If someone’s like, that’s hard for me, but it’s not for you. You can also feel freedom in that.
Hunter Beless
Yeah, I want to piggyback on that, because I really think a helpful guiding principle for this is considering what the Lord has called you to, because Laura, the Lord has called you to write and to share beauty and truth through your words, specifically on Instagram, through poetry, and you do that to the glory of God. And so the Lord has placed different callings on each one of our lives, right? So we have to consider is social media actually helping us to do the thing that the Lord has called us to do, or is it hindering us? Now, if you don’t know exactly, there are things that are explicit in scripture that we all know we’re called to do, and that’s why one of the verses that helps guide me is from Matthew 22 and you might know it because it’s the greatest commandment you know. He says, Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind, this is the greatest and most important command. And the second is, like it, love your neighbor as yourself. And so as I’m engaging on socials, I’m often thinking to myself, is this actually helping me, like, know and love God more? And is it helping me love my neighbor? And that’s been a really helpful guiding principle. You know, there’s so many things I could say, but I think if you’re thinking through, yes, all of these biblical principles, but then also, what has God uniquely called me to do? I name my podcast journey women, because I feel like I’m a journey woman for Jesus, like he is sending me out to seek after those who are lost, to bring them back to him. So how do I use social media? Well, I use it like Paul encourages us to do in Second Corinthians, by being an ambassador for Christ. And so if what I’m posting isn’t consistent with that calling, then I need to reconsider. And we’re each called like Laura said, there’s different uses for this tool. She’s using it to display beauty, truth and goodness. Into the world through her poetry and written word. And whatever it is that we do when we’re on socials, we ought to be doing it to the glory of God. And you know, there’s so many verses that support that, Psalm, 115, one, so scripture really does have a pertinent word to speak to us about socials. And as you’re reading through and thinking about application, don’t exclude social media from that list of application points, you know, and how it informs the way in which you engage online.
Melissa Kruger
And I think that’s true if you have 10 followers or 10,000 followers, because what I think is we all have a circle of influence. And when I think a good question for us all to ask is, if I have an hour long conversation with someone, or they follow me on social media for you know, 10 days, can they find out that I’m about Jesus? Yes, amen. Or is it hidden and I’m kind of embarrassed to share that part of myself or or is it? Oh, yeah, that girl seems really religious. She’s whatever it might be. And I didn’t even mean that in a pejorative way, I mean, but just like, you know how someone maybe who’s not a person of faith might look at us and be like, Oh, they seem real serious about that Bible thing or whatever, and that’s okay. I mean, sometimes I love it, because when maybe I have a neighbor who we’ve just talked about the dogs or whatever, and then we find each other on social media, I’m like, Well, there
Hunter Beless
it is. I know it’s good thing. My pastor says that all the time, whenever somebody asks, well, what do you do? It’s like, Well, I’m a pastor, and it’s great accountability. I feel that, and I’m so grateful, because it does kind of break the ice and get that spiritual conversation going. And in terms of, like, socials, like, if we are friends with Jesus, and you’ve talked about this so much, Melissa, then people ought to know, like, Jesus is our friend, you know, in the way in which they when they’re engaging with our social platform, yeah,
Melissa Kruger
and so it’s really can be a way we engage with others. The verse I have to look at is Ephesians five, look carefully then how you walk not as unwise, but as wise, making the best use of the time, because the days are evil, that’s a good one. It’s the time thing for me. And it’s not just the time, it’s the delight, because Psalm one is a Psalm of wisdom. What does wisdom Tell me? My delight should be in my should be in the law of the Lord, not sit in the seat of mockers, which is really tempting to do on social media. Sit in the seat of mockers. Hmm. Why are they doing that, you know, or whatever, or stand in the way of sinners or what? Yeah. I mean, it’s very tempting. Social media can be that platform, but My delight is to be in the law Lord. And I’ll be honest, sometimes when I’m sitting down to read my Bible, my I’m like, Oh, I have to read this passage, then I can look it’s where’s my delight, my delights in the dessert rather than the meal, you know, or whatever. And and I think that’s where I have to really guard my heart, like we’re saying, and look carefully. It’s so easy to waste a life. It’s so so easy to waste my life, and I don’t know how many days I get. And so it’s not about not being on, it’s being careful about how I’m using my time. There we go, and what I’m doing when I’m on there. Thanks friends so much. This conversation has been so helpful so far. I can’t wait to continue it. We’re going to hear a word really quickly from our sponsors, and then we’ll be right back. Welcome back. Okay. I have this question I want to ask you all, have you ever taken a break from social media. What type of break was it? How do you do that? I don’t think I’ve ever taken a full break from social media. I
Hunter Beless
took a six month break. I did. I took a six month break. And about it. You know, Courtney is the co host of this podcast, if this is your first episode, and she is an older woman in my life who I consistently seek counsel from, and she had a lot to say about social media, and I listened, and she was just saying that there, there aren’t a lot of helpful things that she sees about it. And I thought to myself, exactly what you were talking about, Melissa. Like, is this the best use of the time the Lord has given me? If there’s not a lot of helpful things about this space, I’ve thought about it a lot since then, but I did take a six month break because I felt like I needed time to disassociate with it to the degree that I no longer thought about it, that it was no longer a part of my thought processes, that I got to the point where I didn’t even realize I was on an Instagram break because or a social media break in general, because it wasn’t a part of my life. And so it was a really refreshing break, but I did miss certain things about it, and that was really helpful to be able to discern, like, what is it that I am trying to accomplish on this specific platform? And so I was able to enter back in. Done with a lot more purpose and clarity regarding my use.
Laura Wifler
Well, I haven’t taken that long of a break yet Hunter, but I’ve taken a three month long one that was like very much, I’m totally off of it, not on my phone. And it started out as just wanting to take about four weeks off, and it turned into three months. And I loved it, honestly. Um, I kind of often talk about, like, being somebody who has a high tolerance for social media, um, meaning, sort of, you know, like, like anything where you might be a sweet girl or a salty girl, you can ignore the chips, but you have to have the cookie and vice versa. I feel like social media can kind of be that way, where some of us are just more able to tolerate time on it, and I feel like that has often been me with someone that has pretty thick skin and things, but I was surprised by how much I did not miss social Yes, and a few of my friends and I will joke, I think Hunter I’ve joked with you before, is that we will be the remnant that stays on. You know, there’ll always be a remnant that the Lord calls to stay on social media. And I think for me, staying on social media is very much a decision of saying, Hey, I believe that the gospel can and should go forth on social media, and that God uses these things. And so I want to stay here and be a faithful presence and someone that pushes people to the Lord. And obviously it’s a big part of my career, and so that’s something that I’ve just had to settle but I do think if you’ve never taken a break, it’s a really wise thing to try and I think it can give you a lot of insights into how social media is affecting your life. Because for me, again, I said, Oh, I’m a high tolerance person, like it’s not that, it’s not affecting me that much, and as I kind of detox from it, right? They say it’s 30 days to break a habit, so at least a 30 day break. And it was sort of at that two month mark where I was like, Oh, I do have more clarity of mind. Oh, I am less irritable. Oh, I definitely, you know, I noticed this, right? More time, more time in the day to do other things. So I would recommend it on whoever’s the on the other side, listening to this show, to just try it for at least 30 days, if you never had, and write down insights, you know, do kind of a before and after survey those are out there. Or ask chatgpt to put one together for you, you know, and do some intakes. And then also evaluate on the other side. And I think it can give us a lot of insights. And then it also sets you up really well to set up guardrails for social media as you enter back in. Because it’s again, I would have said, well, this isn’t affecting me that much. Therefore, I don’t need very many boundaries. And when I took the break and had some clarity of mind. I was more firm about what boundaries I wanted to put in place, because I understood the repercussions more, and I think I had just a better grasp on how it was affecting me. So I think breaks are a great idea. I don’t think that you have to take them all the time, but Hunter and I, and Melissa, we all have friends that are like, Hey, I’m on it every other week. You know? I’m on it. I take a month off every January and June. So kind of thinking through, if you want to be someone that takes breaks, having a plan in place can be really helpful. But also, there’s no harm in just being like, No, I’m just done, you know, slam your phone down and go, yeah.
Hunter Beless
I do think though that having a plan is helpful. And Tony Reinke, he’s been talking about this stuff for years, decades, you know. And he really, for me, has been such wise counsel when it comes to smartphone use in general. And he encourages taking a two week break every year, one week every month, and one day every week. So if you’re looking for like, a helpful sieve, like that, could be it to for starters. And honestly, as I saw this question. Melissa in the lineup. I’m coming off of a marketing season. Courtney and I just published the Titus Bible study. And when you’re in a heavy marketing season, you’re encouraged to use social media a lot to leverage the space to help people know that the book exists. And I was challenged to really revisit this, because also simultaneously, we’re about to undergo a remodel. And so I’ve been doing a similar thing. I’ve been using social media as a tool to help me as I’m engaging in that process, kind of foreign territory for me, and honestly, I have slipped into overuse. And so it’s funny, because we have been Laura and I have been talking about this for so long, like social media, I’m like, we’re still talking about social media because we still haven’t figured it out, and we still need to lay our hearts before the Lord and ask him to help us honestly evaluate what’s going on inside them. And it may be something that you have to revisit, you know, time and time again, just as I have.
Melissa Kruger
Do you all have? I love that plan. Do you have any other guardrails that are heart checks that you check in with yourself about, like, I love that’s a really specific way. I’m like, I’m gonna have to think through that. I’m really bad at this stuff. You guys like, I really am. I’m like, Oh, I don’t know that, Mike. And I mean, this is gonna just lead to people thinking we’re terrible people. We’ve been married 28 years. I’m not sure we’ve ever sat down and done up. Budget. And, I mean, in y’all, we have had seasons of no money, don’t spend what we don’t have, and it’s worked. Okay, yeah, no. So that’s, like, very purposeful, and you’re gonna laugh, I’m very purposeful about reading my Bible every day, and that’s kind of where it ends for me. That’s but That’s so thoughtful and good, like are. Do y’all have any other guardrails you put up to really help you think through? Ooh, I need to, I need to check this.
Hunter Beless
There’s so many different things. I mean, for me, I’m seeing overuse. And, you know, our phones tell us that screen time daily report, and nobody wants to look at that, but wow, that can expose overuse. That’s really helpful. You know, what else can expose overuse is the people who are in your everyday life and being humble enough to ask. And I remember, I’m gonna cry, but I remember when I was a young mom, and you know, you use your phone a lot when you are breastfeeding and sitting down, and you know, when the kids are little and you’re not having a whole lot of stimulating conversation. And I remember my youngest, or my oldest, bringing me my cell phone like I was missing an appendage, and it was a huge heart check for me, like she thinks of me needing this phone all the time. And so the people that are in our everyday context, like our husband or our kids, having the humility to ask, Hey, you know, what do you see mommy love most, or my husband? Hey, do you think I’m overusing my phone and just receiving that information as an act of care for your soul. It’s so hard to ask, but just ask other people. Ask the mentors in your life, the people in my everyday life, have been one of the greatest guardrails that the Lord has provided for me to really see myself honestly in regard to my own social media use.
Laura Wifler
That’s great, Laura, those are, those are, those are really great hunter, and I would definitely echo those things. And I think something that I often try to check is just I look behaviorally, you know, and how am I feeling when I’m interrupted? For me is probably like one of the biggest tells, if I am more reactive to things or feeling even mentally checked out or mentally fatigued. You know, it’s hard, because you can justify, well, it’s not my phone. It’s I didn’t sleep last night, or it’s, you know, the kids are tough, or whatever, like, you can justify a lot of those things. But I think it’s just kind of an easy button to say, well, maybe I need to reduce my phone use. The science is there. We’re not even talking about the science, but this is the thing is that this isn’t just anecdotal for people, which it is, but it’s also very science based that our minds are attuned to these phones and that there are real withdrawal symptoms, there are real, real reactions that are going on in our brain because we are engaging not just with social media, but with the smartphone in general. And so I think that’s where it’s like, hey, it’s worth a shot to take a break if you’re feeling particularly moody about things, or you’re constantly comparing your life to others, you know, taking that step back and just being willing to topple the idol and look at it objectively, and you probably won’t be able to. And so that’s where the community that Hunter was speaking about comes into, where they can hold you accountable. And you say, I want to do this, so don’t let me look at my phone when I’m with you, you know. And I think that’s something just as a regular rule for my husband and I, that we constantly have to re employ, but it’s that we don’t want to constantly be on our phones around our kids. And for me, my job requires, you know, being on my phone, being on Instagram. A lot of times I’ll try to tell my kids, if I am mommy is doing work right now. Do you want to see? You know, and like, just having, like, a lot of openness about it. But for both of us overall, like, our goal is that we are not picking up our phones and carrying them with us everywhere we go when we’re at home, but instead that that we’re engaging. But sometimes it takes, I would say there’s, like, a very real conscious decision, and that this isn’t just like me being like, Oh yeah, it’s no big deal. It’s no big deal. It’s like, oh no. I don’t want to be like this. Put my phone back down, put it on a counter, put it in a drawer, put it upstairs, whatever you got to do, but these things, it takes real work to be able to control the phone, I think. And I think that we think I’ll take my fast and I’ll come back and it’ll be fine, or set these rules will be fine, but it’s like anything you know you were talking about studying God’s word, Melissa, it’s every day it’s a choice. Every day it’s a decision. And this is that decision of not wasting our life. You know, it’s, it’s, it’s a constant battle of saying, this will not rule me. And I don’t know, it doesn’t get easier. I haven’t found some magic trick that makes it easier. It’s a daily choice for us to not have our phones run our lives. Yes,
Melissa Kruger
that’s right. And I think sometimes what we don’t realize, one of the guardrails for me is to look back and think what I would have missed. So when you were sharing that story, Hunter, I realized I didn’t have a smartphone with any of my babies, right? Because I was old, they didn’t exist then, you know? And I realized the reason I started gardening was because I was really bored when my kids were outdoors playing so I’d be sitting in the front yard with them, and I was just bored. Yeah, I mean, because sometimes, as they’re playing with their little toys, it’s not that exciting, no, yeah, not to be reality. And I, if I had had a phone, I would have been playing word, or I would have been scrolling, I would have been doing something, and I didn’t have that option. So I started planning things. And so this thing I love so much now I recognize I just would have missed, and that’s hard to measure. It’s really hard to measure, yeah, but, but I also just want to give encouragement, especially because Laura, one thing I was thinking about what you were saying, Were saying the data out there, especially when it comes to our kids, and we’re not going to have time to get into you know, how is this going to affect our kids? But I’ll just say I’ve done a lot of research in that area, and basically every hour your your teen is on social media is is directly correlated to less happiness? Yeah. Wow, yeah. So I have to say, when I cannot get my son to answer me, because my son is the most unattached to his phone of any person I know. In fact, I call him in college and he tells me, I finally get him and I’m like, John, how do your friends find you? He goes, Well, they know if they want to find me, they come to my front porch, because that’s where I’m sitting. I love that. And so I’m just like, okay, he just chooses to be him, and he’s so okay with it. And you know, but it means, right now, he’s hiking the Appalachian Trail, and guess who’s not turning on his phone so mom cannot know where he is. But you know, I realized, like my parents sent me to Ukraine for two months, and I didn’t talk to them the whole summer. Oh, my goodness. And it was right after the fall era. It was like 95 I mean, it was right after Chernobyl, all that stuff, and she didn’t call all summer. Couldn’t call all summer. And I was like, That’s how people used to live. And I think, I think it really speaks to I want to have control and I want to know, not I want to know what’s going on in your backyards. I want to know where I want to ping my children and be able to see where they are. And putting our phone down maybe means letting go of control a little bit and giving it back to the Lord and say, I’m gonna pray for this. So that’s the one thing I would say when I used to wait in those long lines, I’d be like, What can I pray about? Amen, and now, immediately I’m scrolling. So I think one good maybe heart check is, what am I doing less of that was a good thing. Yeah, it’s not that our friends are bad things. It’s just what might I be missing out on because I’m too I’m spending too much time off my phone. Well, this conversation has been so rich and so good, and you women are so thoughtful about this topic. I just want to close we always ask a final question on the deep dish. And before we wrap up, I want to ask you, who is someone that you follow on social media? Who would you would love to meet in real life?
Hunter Beless
I actually did. I saw this question, and I thought I need to think about this more. I’ve had the privilege of meeting a lot of people that I know and have have benefited from following on social media in real life as a result of my occupation. And it’s been a real blessing, I think, to see what Laura was talking about when you are, you know, seeing the fruitfulness in someone else’s life at a distance, to see that a lot of times there is consistency in character. And that is such an encouragement to me. So Melissa, I probably would have had you on the list. I probably would have had Courtney on the list. I have had the privilege of the privilege of meeting you in real life, and it has been such an encouragement to see that who you are online is who you really are, and that has been instructive for me, personally in my own online engagement. So I praise God that I’ve had the chance to meet you guys in person and be able to testify to that for your listeners today.
Melissa Kruger
Okay, I thought you were gonna go, like, wait. I mean, they’re like, you know,
Unknown Speaker
I that was off the top,
Melissa Kruger
Queen Elizabeth.
Laura Wifler
Elizabeth, not alive anymore.
Unknown Speaker
Alive. Let’s
Unknown Speaker
do Okay, okay. I mean, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1
Is there anyone more you follow? Do you have, um,
Laura Wifler
I used to have some of these, like designers, that I thought, oh, I want to meet them. I would tell my husband I would have lunch with them. But I think that that has kind of changed over the years a little bit for me. And I am not trying to give a holier question answer or something, but I would probably pick Johnny Erickson, tada. I have not met her in person and had that from. Knowledge, and I just everything about her, just it was this Jesus from the internet and every other interaction I’ve had with her work. And so talk about somebody who uses social media for good, it would be her. So I think that that’s who I would pick. But I’m sure there’s some celebrity that’s just not coming to mind off the top of my head, but I know that there would be many, a long list of people that I would want to meet that would be fun. So,
Melissa Kruger
yeah, that’s good. I can’t think of anyone either. I’m going blank. I need to scroll through my feet. I know you’re like, who do we want to meet? But I did get the chance, and this is a wonderful way social media brings us together. Years ago, I think it was during COVID, we did a prayer night for TGC, and Johnny was on, was on there, and I got to pray with her during one of the segments for our prayer time. And it was just this amazing thing that the internet brought us together to get to pray during the season of COVID. And so you’re right. I mean, it’s, it highlights the wonderful blessing of sometimes, we get to meet spiritual heroes in our lives that we never would have because we all live in so many different places, and we get to see, we do get to see each other’s backyards and things like that, which is just wonderful, actually, sometimes. So thank you guys for this conversation. It’s been so great to talk to you both. Thanks to our audience for joining us on the deep dish. It’s such a privilege to get to talk with you all as we’re talking together. So thanks for listening. You.
Melissa Kruger serves as the vice president of discipleship programming for The Gospel Coalition (TGC). She’s the author of multiple books, including The Envy of Eve: Finding Contentment in a Covetous World, Walking with God in the Season of Motherhood, Growing Together: Taking Mentoring Beyond Small Talk and Prayer Requests, Wherever You Go, I Want You to Know, and Parenting with Hope: Raising Teens for Christ in a Secular Age. Her husband, Mike, is the Samuel C. Patterson chancellor’s professor of New Testament and early Christianity at Reformed Theological Seminary, and they have three children.
Courtney Doctor (MDiv, Covenant Theological Seminary) serves as the director of women’s initiatives for The Gospel Coalition. She is a Bible teacher and author of From Garden to Glory as well as several Bible studies, including Titus: Displaying the Gospel of Grace, In View of God’s Mercies, and Behold and Believe. Courtney and her husband, Craig, have four children and five grandchildren.
Hunter Beless is the founder of Journeywomen, author of several children’s books, and coauthor with Courtney Doctor of Titus: Displaying the Gospel of Grace. Hunter and her husband, Brooks, have four kids.
Laura Wifler is the cofounder and executive director of Risen Motherhood. She cohosts the popular Risen Motherhood podcast and is coauthor of the best-selling book of the same name. She is author of the best-selling, award-winning children’s book Any Time, Any Place, Any Prayer, as well as Like Me: A Story About Disability and Discovering God’s Image in Every Person. Laura, her husband, and her three children live in central Iowa. You can find her on Instagram or at her website.




