Attention-seeking may seem like a uniquely modern preoccupation, but it derives from an ancient impulse: survival.
Attention-seeking is often the attempt to make up for attention we were denied in childhood. The less we got, the keener the deficit.
The downside of attention-seeking is defining approval as something external to us.
Anything that helps people get to know one another better will help them get and give higher-level attention.
I recently ran across a website called IWannaBeFamous.com, accent on the wannabe. It’s devoted to anyone willing to fill out a form, send in a picture, and tell the world why you want to be famous, at which point they’ll post your plea and your picture for 24 hours. And the reasons people wannabefamous run the gamut:
Rikki: “I want to be wanted.”
Amy: “I want to make my ex-boyfriends jealous.”
Travis: “I’m bored with an ordinary life.”
Meredith: “I want to prove to my family and friends that I’m more than a high school dropout.”
Shenan: “I don’t want to have to wait til I’m dead for my art to be valuable.”