Member-only story

What I Learned From a Viral Tweet

You don’t really want it to happen to you

Sarah Olson
OneZero
4 min readApr 21, 2021

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Two years ago, I walked into my job at a local bookstore shaking with anxiety. I kept checking my phone, watching my notifications explode. Before I arrived at work, I had spent the morning locking down my Facebook account and scrounging my internet presence for any personal details that might jeopardize my safety.

Overnight, a controversial tweet I had written in response to legislature pushing back against abortion access completely blew up. As a young feminist writer, the attention to my work seemed like a dream come true. I was going viral. Who wouldn’t want that?

Instead of celebrating, I felt fear and disgust as the trolling and hateful responses scrolled across my screen. The time I usually spend eating breakfast and getting ready for work was wasted on protecting myself from the angry online mob. They called me things like slut, baby murderer, and worse because I was advocating for women’s rights.

It was horrifying. I feared for my safety. But the trolling was one thing — the response from my conservative family members who saw my viral tweet as it was shared all over the internet was a whole other issue. Relatives blocked and unfriended me, some even scolding me before disappearing from my life. I received angry texts from family and…

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OneZero
OneZero

Published in OneZero

OneZero is a former publication from Medium about the impact of technology on people and the future. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Sarah Olson
Sarah Olson

Written by Sarah Olson

Writing to make people care about important things. Based out of Portland, Oregon.

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