Can Twitter make you happy?

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I’ve just been reading a post on the Social Media Today blog which points to  “a fascinating piece in today’s NY Times Magazine, Is Happiness Catching. The article describes an innovative study by Nicholas Christakis and James Fowler, Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives.

 Some key points in the article:

If you want to be happy, what’s most important is to have lots of friends. The happiest people in Framingham were those who had the most connections, even if the relationships weren’t necessarily deep ones.

The reason these people were the happiest, is that happiness doesn’t come only from having deep, heart to heart talks. It comes from having daily exposure to many small moments of contagious happiness, When you see others smile, your spirits are repeatedly affected by mirroring their emotional state.”

Well for those of us who have become part of a Twitter community based on a shared common interest particularly when it relates to something like cancer, we can certainly testify to the benefits of community. I only wish I had the same level of support when I was diagnosed five years ago with breast cancer. I felt very isolated and I know that sharing the experience with others would have helped me enormously, particularly if I could have connected with younger women. Twitter launced in 2006, when I had finished my treatment, and I only joined it earlier this year. Since I joined I have made new friends and connections all over the globe. I even met one of them at the recent LiveStrong Global Cancer Summit in Dublin and that was a real thrill, and have kept up with many others since that event since Twitter.

These Twitter friends support and reinforce my commitment to breast cancer advocacy in a way that my friends in “real” life can’t, simply because those friends don’t really understand what we have been through.  They know what I mean when I lament lasting effects like “chemo brain”, when my fears of recurrence surface, when I feel down, or feel happy with each cancerversary. Some will say that these aren’t real friendships, but I wouldn’t agree with this. Sure, some of them are fleeting and operate on a superficial level, but the potential for a real friendship developing with many others is certainly there.  I have met up with two Irish bloggers for coffee and while initially, it felt like a kind of blind date, we soon discovered that we had plenty to talk about and much in common in real life. A deeper friendship is certainly possible.

So, what do you think? Can we make real friendships on Twitter? Can we find support and help online? I would love to know what you think….