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Fur-Ever Famous
Robert Dean Hilliard
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Fur-Ever Famous

When Internet Pets Never (Officially) Die
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Still Posting Post-Death
Dustin Dooling
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Still Posting Post-Death

The future of social: Too many zombies, not enough brains
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Mercy Kill Your Online Persona
Ashley Sava
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Mercy Kill Your Online Persona

A Step-by-Step Guide to Euthanizing Your Brand
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Prove You're Human
Nick Gaudio
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Prove You're Human

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Engagement Dread: It’s Not Your Fault (But It Kinda Is?)
Nick Gaudio
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Engagement Dread: It’s Not Your Fault (But It Kinda Is?)

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Mercy Kill Your Online Persona

A Step-by-Step Guide to Euthanizing Your Brand
Ashley Sava

So, you’ve realized it: The current online version of you is a parasite. It feeds on likes, validation, and those fleeting dopamine hits that now make you feel empty. Congratulations. You’ve taken the first step toward euthanizing the most insufferable thing you’ve ever created: yourself. Well, no. Just kidding.

I mean the version of you that’s been curated for engagement.

Pulling the plug on the dated digital you

You know the feeling. That itch in the back of your skull when you haven’t posted in three hours? You’re staring at your phone, and it’s staring right back, daring you to check. Begging you to feed the machine. The world knows you as this algorithm-optimized version of yourself and it’s been great. Until now.

Now you want out. Maybe you’ve hit a wall, or you’ve realized you’ve turned into a performance artist. Either way, you’re here because you’re ready to kill the online persona that took years to build.
Not retire it. Not take a break. Kill it. On purpose.

This isn’t a conversation about "digital detoxing" or "mindful content consumption." This is a surgical strike on your modern online existence as you know it. We’re talking about the intentional destruction of your online persona — the cash cow that’s kept you fed but also kept you chained.

And, of course, you want to do this humanely — even the death of an online personality deserves dignity, right?

Step 1: Admit you have a problem

Don’t worry, you’re in good company — this entire generation is addicted, and no one’s owning up to it. Not seriously, anyway.

You think you’re above it, don’t you? You’ve convinced yourself you’re different because you make content with a purpose. Maybe you share helpful tips, or your selfies always come with a motivational quote. None of it matters, though. The likes, the comments, the saves — it’s all junk food for your brain, but hey, it tastes good, doesn’t it?

You tell yourself it’s work. You have to post. It’s part of your hustle. You’re building a brand. But deep down, when you wake up at 3 a.m. to check your notifications, feeling that gnawing sense of dread, you know the truth. You’ve been trained by the very system you thought you’d hacked.

And the worst part? That version of you isn’t someone you want to be associated with anymore.

You’ve outgrown your niche. The solution? Obliterate it. Come back and reinvent yourself.

Step 2: Make peace with the fact that everyone will move on

Sure, you’ve got followers. You’ve got fans. You’ve got people who’ve slid into your DMs to tell you that you’re an inspiration (translation: they hope you’ll respond so they can screenshot it and feel important for five minutes).

You could vanish tomorrow, and the internet would replace you with someone else’s carefully curated perfection by lunchtime. The people who really care? They’re your family, your close friends — the ones who’ve seen you ugly-cry after that one unforgivable haircut. The rest? They’re only here for the show. They’re entertained, not emotionally invested. You are part of their daily doomscroll, part of the noise that fills the void when they’re bored on the toilet or zoning out during work. Once the lights go out, they’ll find another spectacle.

It’s easy to convince yourself that what you currently do cannot be replaced. But online, you’re a mere mortal of millions doing the same dance — pandering to an algorithm.

Kelli Boyden, Principal Owner at DB-5 Advisors, says she cleansed herself of a large social media following because “enough was enough.” 

Boyden, a lawyer, provided free and reduced-cost legal representation for many years. The thing was, colleagues only acknowledged her when a referral couldn’t pony up the cash. Boyden existed to be peppered into conversations with put-downs alluding to the fact that she sometimes helped people for free.

The turning point was when a judge threw a temper tantrum in open court, and she was threatened with criminal prosecution for asserting her client’s fair housing rights.

“My online following was so big and so productive on Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram,” Boyden said. “I burned down an entire career and persona, changed my name, and changed fields after 20 years of work in one career. I gave up all my social media, got a new phone, and got rid of the leeches that I had inadvertently attracted.”

Her only regret? Not doing it sooner.
“I didn’t just burn the bridge; I threw a grenade at it.”

So take a deep breath and let that sink in. Your disappearance may barely register a blip on anyone’s radar.

But maybe you’ll be happier.

Step 3: Do NOT post a dramatic exit

We’ve seen it a thousand times. You post a dramatic, heartfelt farewell full of “thank you for supporting my journey” and “I’ll miss connecting with you all.” You get a rush of comments. People beg you to stay. Like clockwork, you’re back in a week.

When you do come back, you want to be ready.

If you’re serious about this death wish, don’t post a dramatic farewell. Just go dark. No warning, no goodbye. If you truly want to kill your online persona, you have to disappear. Let them wonder. Let them speculate. It’s the internet version of Irish goodbyes — sneaking out of the party without saying a word.

Trust me, you’ll save yourself the embarrassment of the inevitable comeback post when you realize you missed the attention.

Step 4: Diversify

Some will tell you to deactivate, to walk away from it all. But that’s not what we’re doing here. If you’ve been hyper-focused on one niche, now’s the time to explore others. One-trick pony? Not you!

Maybe you’ve been all about travel. Now’s your chance to bring in those photography skills you’ve honed. If you’ve been focused on fitness, start talking about the mental side of wellness. You’ve got layers, and it’s time to show them.

It’s also terrifying, which is why it’s exactly what you need to do.

Obliterate the old brand, and watch as your former online footprints fade into obscurity. It’ll hurt at first, like amputating a limb, but you’ll walk better without the dead weight.

Step 5: Don’t look back (You’re not Lot’s wife)

Okay — you’ve got rid of the persona you outgrew.

Now, don’t peek through the curtains to see who wishes you were still posting snack-time confessions. Once you’ve committed to killing your old persona, you cannot, under any circumstances, check to see if there’s a demand for its return.

Think of your former online self like a vampire. If you invite it back in, it’ll take over. It’ll start small — maybe you’ll think, “I’ll just revisit this one topic.” However, one thing becomes another, and suddenly you’re spiraling back into the one-dimensional character you fled from in the first place.

When Will Soprano, Director of Digital Products at Atomic Boxes, walked away from his online presence — he says he walked away from a lot of other things, too. “It was the whole kit and caboodle. I walked away from Twitter and LinkedIn on my own, but this was all wrapped up in my own bottoming out with life, drugs, and alcohol.” 

So he extinguished the flames on it all in search of purpose and clarity.

The only way to kill your old online personality for good is to let it die alone. In the dark. Forgotten.

The only way to kill your old online personality for good is to let it die alone. In the dark. Forgotten.

Write that down.

Step 6: Break your dependency on external validation

Here’s where things get messy…you have to retrain your brain. You’ll have to learn to give yourself the validation you’ve been outsourcing.

When you find yourself yearning for that approval, pause and ask yourself: “What do I really think about this?” Shift your focus inward. Write down your thoughts, your ideas, your feelings. Own them. You might discover that your insights are richer, more profound, and infinitely more valuable than anything you’d receive from a faceless crowd.

“I take a lot of time for myself now. I fix up my house, buy new clothes, and do things that interest me instead of always putting my needs aside for someone else,” Boyden said.

The more you practice self-acceptance, the easier it will become to appreciate who you are without needing others to validate that existence. As you grow comfortable in your own skin, you’ll find that the weight of the world is lifting, replaced by a buoyant sense of emancipation.

Until you’ve done this, you’re not in the right headspace to reinvent your brand.

Step 7: Accept that you’ll lose money

Killing your online persona might cost you. Like, real money. Brands won’t sponsor the person who no longer represents their interests. Your carefully constructed career as a content creator will take a hit.

But that’s the price you pay for freedom. You’ll learn to live without the extra cash flow that comes from sponsored posts and brand deals. You’ll find new ways to make money — ones that don’t involve selling pieces of yourself to the highest bidder.

“I ran a multiple six-figure-a-year business as a personal brand for close to eight years and then said ‘screw it’ in 2023 and went into a full-time remote role in marketing,” Jessica Rodriguez, Marketing Manager, said. “I could go on and on about what a hell of a process it was to go from posting daily to no one knowing what's going on with me anymore, but my mental health has never been better.”

Rodriguez had a fitness account on Facebook with 25,000 followers, a Facebook business personal brand with 4,500 followers, and an Instagram following of more than 5,000 when she stepped away.

“That number had everything to do with how I saw myself and my business because everything I was building was through social media,” she explained. “It meant that people connected with how I was showing up so I needed to not only keep showing up but show up how I thought people wanted to see me. I wound up having a breakdown from the pressure of it three years in and had to change the way I saw social media.”

So, what does finding new avenues to grab moola look like in practical terms? For starters, you might find yourself diving into a more traditional job market.

Alternatively, you could explore side hustles that don’t hinge on a social media presence. Perhaps you start a freelance gig in writing or consulting for marketing teams. Maybe you offer classes in cooking or photography. The world is full of opportunities that don’t require you to monetize your identity.

You could restart the whole process again. Whatever you do, if you decide to monetize your new brand, make sure it aligns with the new you.

Step 8: Shift from performing to being

Now comes the uncomfortable part. Who are you when you’re not posting? When you’re not performing for an audience? When you’re not putting every part of your life through a filter?

Renee Lynn Frojo, Content & Storytelling Strategist, told us about building a brand around a carefully curated life — married, living in San Francisco, cooking healthy California meals, all while drawing inspiration from her Mexican upbringing and Indian in-laws. But then, overnight, that life imploded. She realized her marriage was ending, and the details of that shift felt too intimate to share online.

“Once I recognized that I had been pretending both in my marriage and online, I knew I couldn’t keep this facade going. I was exhausted from the constant performance,” she reflected. She had amassed 10,000 followers in less than a year, posting daily and presenting an image that no longer resonated with her truth.

People can spend so long curating a perfect online existence that the real world feels foreign, like a place they haven’t visited in years. You’re about to face the same identity crisis, but this is your chance to rediscover yourself — outside of the constraints of the algorithm.

Read that book you’ve been meaning to dive into, try your hand at painting, or sign up for a dance class. Experiment with different hobbies, untainted by the desire to document everything for an audience. Allow yourself to be fully present in these moments, to feel the joy of creation without the pressure to perform or share.

It’ll be awkward. You’ll feel lost. But slowly, you’ll start to figure out who you are without the likes and the comments. You might even like that person more than the one you were pretending to be online. And that is the person you want to invite back to reframe a persona that you can stomach.

Unless, of course, you truly, truly suck. But let’s hope that’s not the case.

Step 9: Brace for the intermediate withdrawals

Let’s not sugarcoat this: it’s going to suck. You’ve been high on the attention, and you’re about to come crashing down.

The first few days will be rough. You’ll feel restless, anxious, like you’ve forgotten something important. You’ll find yourself reaching for your phone out of habit, only to remember there’s nothing to check. No messages. No notifications. Just silence.

“At first, I felt like I was letting people down, including myself. I was embarrassed that I had built something on such shaky ground,” Frojo said.

But this feeling was quickly replaced with comfort and ease.

“Ultimately, I felt a sense of relief around not having to show up and perform in this way anymore.”

It took Frojo years, some therapy, and a shift in her business model to approach LinkedIn with newfound clarity. “I realized my personal brand could still be authentic and tied to my story, but with more intention. I learned to separate my whole life from my business.”

Rodriguez shared a similar sentiment.

“I thought it would be a relief, but it was mostly anxiety at first,” she said. “Was I making the right decision? What would people think when I spent years saying how it's important to show up and now I'm not?”

As the days roll on, the withdrawal will wane. You’ll begin to feel a sense of clarity that was once clouded by the noise of your online life. The silence will transform from a void into a canvas — a blank space where you can paint the life you want to live, unburdened by the expectations of others.

“I started to realize just how much of an impact showing up every day and having my life documented online had on me,” Rodriguez said. “How many things I did just to be able to have a photo for social. How many thoughts I had running in my head behind everything I was doing instead of just living in that moment.”

Withdrawal is temporary. It’s your brain’s way of resetting after years of being bombarded with validation junk food. And just like any addiction, the longer you go without it, the easier it becomes.

Step 10: Prepare for the nostalgic FOMO

Rest assured: The internet will keep moving without you. You’ll hear about viral trends, big news, or massive collabs, and you’ll wonder if you should’ve stuck it out just a little longer.

Here’s the thing: The internet is designed to make you feel like you’re missing out.

It’s built on the fear that something big is happening without you. But once you realize that you’re not missing anything important, the FOMO will fade.

“It's easy to talk about building a personal brand,” Rodriguez said. “It’s not so easy to talk about the things you navigate behind the scenes that change your views on what all this access is doing to us as humans.”

You don’t need to be part of every conversation. You don’t need to jump on every trend. Invest your time and energy in the spaces that matter.

Step 11: Rebuild with intention

After the dust settles, you may want to rebuild. And that’s okay. If you’ve decided to take a break or scale back, that’s fine — but when you return, do so with the utmost intention. Don’t rebuild with the sole purpose of pleasing the algorithm. Be mindful about the ways you engage and what you choose to share. This time, you’re not a product; you’re a person.

When Soprano returned online, he was determined to show up as himself — not the sanitized, on-brand persona he had once crafted. “I was going to find myself so that I could be myself everywhere I went,” he asserted.

And so he did.

Consider diversifying how you share without falling into old habits. Discuss your knowledge or passions in ways that invite conversation without sacrificing yourself along the way.

Reconnect with the people who matter. Leave the hungry-for-validation bullshit at the door.

Step 12: The old you is a distant memory

Once you shed your old online persona, that part of you will be forgotten. People will move on. The world will keep spinning, and you’ll fade from the minds of people who once checked your Stories every day.

“Let the curated version of you die. And in its place? You get to live.”

But hey, you’re more than a jack of one trade. If you’re worried about fading into the background because you’re no longer serving up the same content, trust that you’ll attract a better audience, one that’s here for you — not just the highlight reels.

So let them forget. Let the curated version of you die. And in its place? You get to live.

The sweet relief of detox

So you’ve liberated yourself from the shackles of approval, the prison of likes, and the chains of creation.

Take a hike without documenting it? Attend an event without feeling the pressure to post about it?

Maybe you’ll share ideas you’ve been holding back, dive into a passion project without worrying if it’s “on brand,” or simply enjoy your life without the need to turn every moment into content. You can experiment, create for the joy of it, or even just disappear for a while and re-emerge when you feel like it. This is your chance to show up as the most authentic, multi-dimensional version of yourself — no filters, no algorithm to kiss up to.

And isn’t that what you really wanted all along?