yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

What happens to your digital life after you die? | BJ Miller | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

So here's a good example of where modern dying is just unintuitive and exotic, really. We've been dying forever, but there's some new wrinkles to it. And one of the biggest wrinkles you're going to come across is this social media world.

And even if you're not on social media, you're going to have some digital life. Most of us, whether it's bank, online passwords, or whatever it is, it's practically impossible not to have some digital footprint in this world. And as it goes, whether it's because of denial or whatever else, so far, death isn't really built into those systems.

So it's only recently that some of the social media outlets are figuring out to offer a pathway of how to close down an account for someone who's actually died. And we've still got a ways to go. It's very common and can be kind of grotesque or chilling; very often people will be included in Facebook posts, for example, or there'll be some automatic birthday note that goes out to their LinkedIn group or something, and the person died a year or two ago.

And it can be really chilling for a family member to receive an automated message from someone who's died. So it's a new kind of perverse issue. So all that to say is you do need to take, besides your ethical will and your legal will, you have to take a minute to think through how you're going to close out your digital life, too.

And so that can be as simple as itemizing somewhere all your digital accounts, all those passwords. That can save your family tons of trouble. And increasingly, social media outlets will have a way to build into their framework a way for death to happen online, too.

But otherwise, you just need to at least convey ways for your loved ones to get into your accounts. And other things that can be very helpful—like a credit card—if you know you're sick and dying at some point soon, you might want to make that a joint account. Put your spouse or your loved one on that account with you.

So, after you're gone, they still have access to it. I have a lot of patients who go on to spend years—well, I say my patients. I see families, too. So, I'll see people in bereavement—spouses who've lost their husband or wife, who was my patient.

And then I see the spouse in bereavement. And it's very common that they have a one to two year hangover of dealing with closing accounts—cell phone bills, cable, whatever it is. So, you've got to get those passwords across. And even better, put that other person on the account so they can do it themselves.

More Articles

View All
Photo Ark | Series Trailer
[Music] All right, this’ll work. Okay, we’re ready for the cobra. [Music] He’s running away from me. There we go, that’s just the first one. I’m all worn out. Okay, for the past 15 years, I’ve made a thousand trips to photograph over 10,000 species and s…
How China Rips Off American Small Businesses
[Music] Let’s say you have a product that you’re going to use Chinese manufacturing. You used to think it was low cost. You buy the molds, you spend $400,000 on molds. You start making the product, you start selling it in the United States. The minute i…
The Dark Side of Everyday Things | Why We Can't Have Nice Things Anymore
to participate in viral challenges popularized by the platform. These incidents underline a disturbing trend: social media platforms, particularly TikTok, have the potential to influence vulnerable users, especially children, into engaging in dangerous b…
“Someone despises me. That’s their problem.” | How to Build Stoic Fortitude
There’s a big difference between having fortitude and hiding away in a fortress. In the latter case, we physically separate ourselves through self-isolation. Oftentimes, this is an attempt to hide from the big, bad things in the world. It’s not unlikely t…
15 Beliefs That Limit Your Success
Your brain purposely makes you feel like you’re weak. The reason for this is to protect you from potential future pain, and in this process, it creates a series of myths about you which you believe to be true. When, in fact, they are just lies your brain …
Jacksonian Democracy part 4
So we’ve been talking about Jacksonian Democracy, and when we last left off, Andrew Jackson had defeated John Quincy Adams in the election of 1828, largely by claiming that Quincy Adams had won the previous election through a corrupt bargain. So Jackson …