
The place of social networks in our lives has become too important, especially those focused on the image as Tik Tok, Instagram, and Facebook.
Every day, we see people posting their images seeming to live in total happiness and success, which creates a deep discomfort, pushing people to imitate these clichés at all costs.
Some people are ready to make huge concessions and sacrifice everything to please people and be loved by everyone.
They try to imitate the person in front of them, even talk like them, make the same gestures, and sometimes pretend to have the same job as them. This is called Zelig's syndrome or the chameleon effect.
People with this disorder do not know who they are and what they like. They lose their identity by being a perfect image of others.
For fear of rejection by society, they cannot say no, constantly seek recognition and validation from others, and develop a massive inferiority complex.
These people need to be made aware of their problems. They live in the present and are unable to create their memories.
A cerebral vascular accident that can affect the cerebral area that controls the coherent social behavior of the individual with his environment would be responsible for this disorder.
But nowadays, a choice imposed by the weight of social networks in our daily life pushes us to camouflage our differences to resemble others and melt into our environment as the chameleon does.