📖 Read more: Sunday Scaries: Why You Feel Anxious Every Sunday Night
📖 What Is FOMO?
The term FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) first appeared in academic literature in 2004, coined by Patrick J. McGinnis (an MBA student at Harvard Business School) in an article for The Harbus. The first scientific study was conducted by Dr. Andrew Przybylski (University of Oxford) in 2013, published in Computers in Human Behavior.
Przybylski defined FOMO as: "A pervasive apprehension that others might be having rewarding experiences from which one is absent" — accompanied by a desire to stay continually connected with what others are doing.
Sources: Przybylski et al. (2013), Eventbrite/Harris Poll (2014), Strategy Online
🧠 The Psychology Behind FOMO
FOMO isn't a “character weakness.” It has deep roots in human psychology:
Self-Determination Theory (SDT)
According to Deci & Ryan, every person has three basic psychological needs: autonomy, competence, and relatedness. When these aren't fulfilled, the brain reacts — and FOMO is one such reaction. Przybylski's study (2013) showed that individuals with low basic need satisfaction experience significantly higher FOMO.
Social Comparison
Leon Festinger's social comparison theory (1954) explains it: we constantly compare ourselves to others. Social media creates a filtered highlight reel — you only see the best of other people's lives, while you live the entirety of your own.
Dopamine & Uncertainty
Every time you check your feed, your brain gets a small dopamine “hit” — especially when the outcome is uncertain. This variable reward mechanism is the same one used by slot machines.
Loss Aversion
According to Kahneman & Tversky, people fear loss more than they enjoy an equivalent gain. FOMO activates precisely this mechanism: you feel like you're “losing out” on experiences.
📖 Read more: Impostor Syndrome: Why You Feel Like a Fraud
📱 How Social Media Amplifies FOMO
FOMO existed before social media — but social media amplified it exponentially. Przybylski (2013) showed that higher FOMO correlates with greater social media use, especially Facebook — and the relationship is bidirectional:
The Vicious Cycle: FOMO → Social Media → FOMO
- You feel FOMO → “What are others doing?”
- You open Instagram/TikTok → You see highlight reels
- Comparison → “My life isn't that interesting”
- Even greater FOMO → More scrolling
- Result: Lower self-esteem, increased anxiety, exhaustion
A study in the Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology (Hunt et al., 2018, University of Pennsylvania) found that limiting social media to 30 minutes per day over just 3 weeks significantly reduced loneliness, depression, anxiety — and FOMO.
🎯 Who Is Most at Risk?
According to studies on adolescents, college students, and adults:
- Young people aged 14-35: Gen Z and Millennials experience FOMO at much higher rates — having grown up with social media
- People with low self-esteem: Social comparison hits harder — every post becomes a measure of worth
- Extroverts: They want to be everywhere — missing out creates intense FOMO
- College students: Alt's study (2015) showed that FOMO in students is linked to lower academic performance due to divided attention
- Professionals: Workplace FOMO — fearing you're missing out on opportunities, projects, recognition
💫 FOMO vs JOMO: The Contrast
In contrast to FOMO, JOMO (Joy of Missing Out) is the conscious choice not to participate, without guilt. The term was popularized by blogger Anil Dash (2012):
😰 FOMO
- "Why wasn't I invited?"
- Endless scrolling
- Comparing yourself to others
- Worrying about what you're missing
- Reactive decisions
- Feeling inadequate
😊 JOMO
- "I chose to stay home"
- Present moment, mindfulness
- Focusing on yourself
- Enjoying what you're doing
- Conscious choices
- Feeling fulfilled
🛡️ 7 Ways to Combat FOMO
1. Limit Your Social Media Time
The Hunt et al. (2018) study proves it: 30 minutes per day of social media significantly reduces FOMO, anxiety, and depression. Use Screen Time / Digital Wellbeing tools.
2. Focus on Gratitude
Instead of “what am I missing,” ask “what do I have.” Gratitude is proven to reduce comparison. Write down 3 things every night — it changes your mindset in 3 weeks.
📖 Read more: People Pleasing: Why You Always Say Yes to Everyone
3. Invest in Real Relationships
Przybylski (2013) shows: FOMO decreases when your psychological needs are met — especially the sense of connection (relatedness). Real IRL time > 1000 likes.
4. Curate Your Feed
Unfollow accounts that fuel comparison. Follow educational, inspirational, or funny content. Your feed = your mental diet.
5. Turn Off Notifications
Every notification intensifies FOMO: “What's happening without me?” Turn off social media push notifications — YOU decide when to open them.
6. Mindfulness & Being Present
Studies show that mindfulness significantly reduces FOMO. Five-minute breathing exercises bring the brain back to the “here and now.”
7. Understand That Social Media Is a Highlight Reel
Nobody posts their bad moments. What you see on Instagram is 5% of someone's life — the most filtered, photoshopped, staged 5%. Your comparison isn't fair: you're comparing your backstage with their highlights.
"The fear of missing out isn't really about what you're missing. It's about a deeper unfulfilled need for connection, belonging, and meaning."
🧪 Conclusion: Live Your Own Life
FOMO is deeply human — your brain doesn't want you to be left out of the “tribe.” But in the age of social media, this instinct becomes a syndrome: it keeps you glued to a screen, watching other people's lives instead of living your own.
The antidote isn't to quit social media entirely. The antidote is JOMO: the joy of consciously choosing what you do, where you are, who you talk to. The joy of “it's okay — right now I'm exactly where I want to be.”
Close Instagram now. Go outside. Or don't — as long as it's your own choice.
Sources & References
- Przybylski A.K. et al. — Motivational, emotional, and behavioral correlates of fear of missing out (Computers in Human Behavior, 2013)
- Hunt M.G. et al. — No More FOMO: Limiting Social Media Decreases Loneliness and Depression (JSCP, 2018)
- Wikipedia — Fear of Missing Out (extensive academic references)
- Alt D. — College students' academic motivation, media engagement and fear of missing out (Computers in Human Behavior, 2015)
