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Ariella Brown

Where Prayer Meets Hashtags

Written by Ariella Brown
12/6/2011 65 comments
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For years, Harry Moseley suffered from a brain tumor. He was just 11 years old when he died October 9, 2011. In the years before his death, he devoted himself to raising money for research after an adult friend of his died from the same affliction. Inspiring multitudes and raising over £500,000 ($779,817) for Cancer Research UK, earning the title of “Britain's Kindest Kid,” Harry championed his cause by selling bracelets and reaching out to people over the Web through his Website and Twitter account.

In August, Harry slipped into a coma after an unsuccessful tumor surgery. The call for prayers spread on the Internet, and many tweeted that they were praying for Harry. But some people tweeted as follows: “Please add #WakeUpHarry to your tweet for @harry_moseley who is fighting for his life in a coma. Thanks.” Unfortunately, Harry never did wake up.

The idea of tweeting one’s wishes for recovery may be rooted in some of the benefits people see in praying, which are often described in psychological rather than theological terms. For instance, the University of Minnesota offers a list of explanations for the efficacy of prayer, none of which involve miraculous intervention:

  • The relaxation response - prayer elicits the relaxation response, which lowers blood pressure and other factors heightened by stress.
  • Secondary control - prayer releases control to something greater than oneself, which can reduce the stress of needing to be in charge.
  • The placebo response - prayer can enhance a person's hopes and expectations and that in turn can positively impact health.
  • Healing presence - prayer can bring a sense of a spiritual or loving presence and alignment with God or an immersion into a universal unconsciousness.
  • Positive feelings - prayer can elicit feelings of gratitude, compassion, forgiveness, and hope, all of which are associated with healing and wellness.
  • Mind-body-spirit connection - when prayer uplifts or calms, it inhibits the release of cortisol and other hormones, thus reducing the negative impact of stress on the immune system and promoting healing.
  • Given that none of these factors are predicated on the response of a deity, it seems possible to attain the same end through other means that establish a feeling of connection. Those means now include social media.

    In a blog post entitled “How Communication Creates Meaning -- has Twitter replaced prayer?,” David Windle accounts for what he calls “The Twitter God.” He explains how people can tap into feeling a part of some greater connection through social media: “Twitter gives the illusion that you’re being listened to. Through social media we create communication bubbles; massive conversational meshes which couch us in a sense of meaning, and the comforting notion that you exist somewhere beyond the realm of your own immediate self.” Windle sees social media as filling the void left when people cannot tap into traditional religious expressions of prayer: “We all need to believe in something bigger than ourselves, and communication facilitates this. Even if that bigger thing is only ‘yourself as part a chorus of online chatter.’”

    The hashtag reaches out to others for affirmation and meaning in place of prayer. It resembles Peter Pan’s turning to the audience with, “If you believe in fairies, clap your hands!” to bring Tinkerbell back to life.

    Instead of clapping, one expresses one’s hope in hashtags. One has to actually have faith in the efficacy of the hashtags themselves as representations of “something greater than oneself” that relieves the burden from the individual.

    — Ariella Brown is a freelance writer, editor, and social media consultant.

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    SecTech
    Thinkernetter
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 6:58:23 AM
    no ratings

    It's amazing what people will do when there is a cause that inspires them.  While this didn't have a happy ending, I've seen cases where amazing results were achieved through something similar. 

    Now why does it take an inspiring cause to do things they should do on a daily basis?

    Ariella
    Thinkernetter
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 8:19:09 AM
    no ratings

    Unfortunately, that's human nature. It takes something out of the ordinary routine to get people to pay attention to such possibilities.

    SteveGNYC
    IQ Crew
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 8:26:50 AM
    no ratings

    Thank you for this -- inspirational. And great application of today's resources. Yes, it does seem like it takes the extraordinary to break us out of our ordinary. Given the holiday that is upon us, I'd say that's validation.

    Happy holidays and give to a charity, small amounts do add up.

    Ariella
    Thinkernetter
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 9:15:30 AM
    no ratings

    A nice takeaway, Steve.

    Mary Jander
    Thinkernetter
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 9:46:12 AM
    no ratings

    Years ago, someone wrote that TV could be like a modern form of meditation, particularly when people watch "mindlessly" after work and don't recall what they watched the next morning.

    That's what came to mind when I read about suggested linkage between prayer and Twitter. While it's a stretch for me to think of Twitter hashtags replacing prayer, I can see where the motivations for posting pleas are similar.

    Ariella
    Thinkernetter
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 9:56:28 AM
    no ratings

    @Mary Some people do use Twitter and other social media to spread the word about a cause or to ask people to pray. But I noticed that in this particular case the hashtags were suggested as the expression of the individual rather than as a means to another end. Ironically, the hashtage did not remain clearly linked to that particular cause. #WakeUpHarry was used a short time later as a link to a video of Harry Belafonte sleeping while he was called on for a televized interview.  

    Mary Jander
    Thinkernetter
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 10:06:28 AM
    no ratings

    Sorry, Ariella, I'm having trouble following the argument here, then. The blog seems to indicate that hashtags are a modern way to pray, ie pray for someone who needs help. Am I mistaken here?

    Nicole Ferraro
    IQ Crew
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 10:18:08 AM
    no ratings

    Ariella, I'm seeing two threads in your post -- one I can sort of get on board with, and one that's tougher for me to grasp. The first is that people find solace in feeling other people are listening to them on the Web. I'm happy to accept that. The second, the one I'm having a harder time with, is the idea of believing in the "power of hashtags."

    I guess I'm just confused about what you're suggesting hashtags are capable of doing. Might they raise awareness about issues? Sure. Do hashtags turn Twitter into some higher power? That I can't swallow. (Looking at Twitter's home page today, the top two hastags are #GiftsGrandmaWontWant and #NeverTrustAGirlThat.) But maybe that's not what you're suggesting... I'm still a bit unclear.

    SteveGNYC
    IQ Crew
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 12:07:23 PM
    no ratings

    I took it that it is not a replacement for prayer so much as a wider call or casting a wider net in the prayer process. Sure peeps would need to be followers, but a follower can suggest the follow to others, who each suggest it to others, etc etc. So by several degrees of separation we can see how the power of collective prayer by people you (as the initiator) never knew, just grows.

    It's what I found inspiring -- that although you don't know the originator, you are in some way connected through friends of friends.

    But I didn't read that this method was instead of, but in addition to. 

    Kurtkeys
    IQ Crew
    Tuesday December 6, 2011 12:22:05 PM
    no ratings

    Ariella,

    I for one, do believe in the power of prayer. But only prayer offred to the Almighty creator of the universe. That doesn't mean, in my mind, that God doesn't see twitter requests for intercession. I just never thought about it until just now.

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