It’s the most wonderful time of the year to stop tweeting.
People all around the world are coming together to vow they will not be on social media over the holidays.
The annual Yuletide logging off has become a grand new tradition – a mass exodus of those “taking a break from Twitter” who “won’t be checking social media” until the new year.
It makes perfect sense. Christmas – with its stress, arguments and pointless fights – can be in many ways, nothing but Twitter in real life. So why double up? Last week, the actor Lili Reinhart summed up the general mood when she signed off “toxic” Twitter and announced it was “like a cesspool for evil”.
But it’s equally as cliched that everyone will break their vow immediately – or at least spend the whole time scrolling under the table.
Nevertheless, across the world, people began logging off.
I’m logging off twitter for a while. I need to immerse myself in full DANCE MOM and Xmas. See you all soon #auspol
— PatriciaKarvelas (@PatsKarvelas) December 21, 2018
Christmas wrapping done and now ready to have a few days of down time. I’ll be taking a break from Twitter, so best wishes for Christmas from Gordon and I 🎄☃️ pic.twitter.com/mYZjksAVlF
— Stewart McDonald MP (@StewartMcDonald) December 23, 2018
Fatiguée des insultes constantes, Lili Reinhart (#Riverdale) quitte Twitter temporairement, comme elle l'explique dans sa story Instagram. pic.twitter.com/MXLc7QJxMS
— Romain Cheyron (@Romain_Ch) December 18, 2018
Former Breaking Bad actor Aaron Paul announced it too, in more muted terms. On Sunday night, the UK Labour peer Andrew Adonis disagreed, and struck the most defiant, and perhaps funniest, tone of the season.
I am not signing off twitter for Christmas. There is Brexit to be stopped
— Andrew Adonis (@Andrew_Adonis) December 23, 2018
But any Twitter break is a vow made to be broken, as seen in this faux-logging off post from Queensland Labor senator Anthony Chisholm.
Going to have a break from Twitter for a couple of weeks, exception is if an LNP MP does something stupid. So will likely be back within hours. #auspol
— Anthony Chisholm (@AnthonyChisholm) December 22, 2018
And the number of people who have “taking a break” in their display name, but who are nevertheless still tweeting.
Banter is way overrated https://t.co/RaVVzqHtuX
— Joan is taking a break before 2019 (@joanhewrites) December 22, 2018
5 of 5 stars to Muse of Nightmares by Laini Taylor https://t.co/bvaPurHG8v
— Kristi is taking a social media break! (@kmdiehm) December 21, 2018
The louder you proclaim taking a break from Twitter, the sooner you will be back.
Even the New Zealand ministry of foreign affairs lied to us. “We’ll be taking a break,” it said on Friday.
Season’s greetings to everyone. We'll be taking a break on Twitter till January 7. If you’re a Kiwi travelling overseas during the holidays, don’t forget to register on https://t.co/feEhYwsvQL pic.twitter.com/e6ltI08xLP
— MFATgovtNZ 🇳🇿 (@MFATgovtNZ) December 20, 2018
It was back two days later – telling us to get a working holiday visa for Japan.
Did you know Kiwis can get a working holiday visa to #Japan? And Japanese people can have a working holiday in NZ too. Check out https://t.co/mppCIGvIr2 pic.twitter.com/c1zx46Otrk
— MFATgovtNZ 🇳🇿 (@MFATgovtNZ) December 22, 2018
Guardian Australia’s own columnist Greg Jericho fell victim too. Fittingly, it was so he could tweet a graph.
I'm taking a Twitter break till the New Year.
— Greg Jericho (@GrogsGamut) December 19, 2018
So I hope everyone has a great *and safe* Christmas.
See you in 2019, I'm off to read some books and relax.
Breaking my Twitter holiday...
— Greg Jericho (@GrogsGamut) December 21, 2018
So for all the bluster, logging off is really one of the most pointless announcements you can make, as many on Twitter themselves pointed out:
What I say: I’m logging off twitter goodbye!
— al [saw bo rhap x4] (@alexfckingnovak) December 20, 2018
What I mean: I’m closing the app for 5 seconds and then reopening it!
I’d like to announce that I will not be taking a break from Twitter this Christmas time. I felt it important to say rather than just keep turning up to chat.
— Shappi Khorsandi (@ShappiKhorsandi) December 18, 2018
Why are people taking breaks off Twitter during the holiday period? ‘Tis the season I need this sort of escapism the most! What I supposed to do instead? Indulge in tension and anxiety-riddled interaction with my relatives?! 😥
— Joana Ramiro (@JoanaRamiroUK) December 22, 2018
On Friday, Nikki Usher wrote in Slate that the “taking a break” message was so ubiquitous because it is the only effective way to set an away or out-of-office reply on social media.
Hi - so I tried to pin a tweet to let you all know I was taking a break from Twitter. Without away messages, it’s basically impossible to let you know this in any meaningful way. The death of the away message, below https://t.co/skSWivKFYv
— Nikki Usher, Ph.D. (@nikkiusher) December 21, 2018
Whatever the reason, the Christmas log-off is a proper modern tradition. Magical, hopeful and impossible. We’ll see you back online soon.