Co-rumination: why you can’t let commiseration drag down your community

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Photo by Stephanie Saujon Baltz at La Photographie

In 2007, I founded an online community component of my website, Offbeat Wed. The goal with the Offbeat Bride Tribe was to give people planning nontraditional weddings a venue to network, share inspiration, and compare notes.

Inevitably, I knew some of the notes being compared would be frustration and anger. Planning any wedding can be a difficult process, but when you’re planning a non-traditional wedding, there’s the added challenge of family conflict and swimming upstream against cultural norms and traditions.

I knew that I wanted to keep the community from spiraling into a cesspool of negativity, but I couldn’t quite put my finger on why. “Let’s keep things constructive!” I’d shout into the growing storm of venting and rants. I worried that new members joining the community would be walking into the digital equivalent of a grumpy shouting match, and that instead of inspiration they’d be finding a chorus of people shouting “Everything suuuuucks!”

It wasn’t until I read a New York Times article about a psychology concept called “co-rumination” that I finally had a word to attach to spiral of negativity that can drag down online communities:

The term researchers use is “co-rumination” to describe frequently or obsessively discussing the same problem. The behavior is typical among teens — Why didn’t he call? Should I break up with him? And, psychologists say, it has intensified significantly with e-mail, text messaging, instant messaging and Facebook. And in certain cases it can spin into a potentially contagious and unhealthy emotional angst, experts say.

The research distinguishes between sharing or “self-disclosure,” which is associated with positive friendships and positive feelings, and dwelling on problems, concerns and frustrations. Dwelling and rehashing issues can keep women, who are more prone to depression and anxiety than men, stuck in negative thinking patterns, psychologists say.

While the article specifically addresses how young women are prone to the dangers of co-rumination, I strongly believe that the concept can be applied to any online community.

Co-rumination is highly contagious. When your members see each other using your community as a platform to vent and rant, they want to join in either by chiming “me to!” or by practicing grievance one-upsmanship, with members crowing, “Oh, you think YOU’VE got it bad!? Take a listen to this…”

Before you know it, your online community can from a platform for sharing and networking to a circle jerk of complaints and anger, filled with tooth-gnashing and arm waving at the awfulness and injustice of positively everything.

Now, of course, there are some communities where this kind of conversation is perfectly appropriate — groups supporting people in times of grief or loss, or consumer communities about tracking frustrations. In some communities, commiseration is just fine.

But many online communities, co-rumination can lead the tone of the group into a downward spiraling, creating a grumbling, grinching negative space where more interesting conversation is ignored in lieu of “Yeah, I hate that too!” and “Listen to how bad *I* have it.”

Comments on Co-rumination: why you can’t let commiseration drag down your community

  1. Co-rumination can be very dark indeed. Years ago I was very depressed, and found a support group of depressed women online. For a little while it was good to see that I really wasn’t the only person in the world feeling this way. But one day I kind of woke up and realized that we were all bringing each other down – misery loves company. We were all online bitching about how miserable we were, when we could have been directing that energy toward something useful, like taking a brisk walk in the sunshine, meeting up with a friend, journaling, cooking a simple meal – all the little things that can help with depression. Co-ruminating not only traps you in a rut, but also *normalizes* that rut. Very dangerous. Thanks for introducing the concept’s name to me!

    • I felt this way on a postpartum depression site. The board quickly took me from feeling, “Oh thank God I’m not the only one having a hard time” to feeling, “Everyone hates being a mother and it will never get better…” No one came back to spread sunshine if they did feel better, so only a never-ending stream of difficulties was presented.

      • I’ve found this problem on conception websites. I’m not devastated that it’s taking some time. Because these sites are full of people who are, and who are looking for people to obsess with, for a little while I felt like maybe if I wasn’t as upset as these other women, then I wasn’t ready to be a mom. Of course, this is incredibly flawed logic, but I found that the more time I spent on conception sites, the more I felt this way. Now, I just use the site for charting and more or less ignore the chatter, which has helped me see that trying to conceive doesn’t mean I can’t have a life or be happy while we’re waiting.

  2. I feel like I need to start doing this. Since my miscarriage I’ll start to feel okay about thing, then I’ll get a website update from a miscarriage support group I joined, and as I read other posters’ updates I find that I become utterly depressed. While I like having that support group, I find going to it when I’m feeling okay about things only makes it worse and deepens my depression. Maybe it’s time I stop subscribing to those updates.

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