The main post 99 Days of Freedom: Who Goes Back Early? lists four topics for Day 33 responses. The second Day 33 topic is Friends’ reactions limited: about, know, one, don’t, really.

In Spanish: “He had over 2,000 friends on Facebook, don’t you think there should be more people here?”
(Source: http://www.pinterest.com/)
Most responses to this topic come from the question about how the respondents’ friends reacted. The responses describe a minimal reaction from friends, in some cases that friends did not even notice:
“Not many really cared or commented. I don’t think anyone shared in my revolt.”
“They didn’t even notice that I wasn’t there. No one called or emailed to ask what was up.”
“Nobody is bothered. Nobody outside fb asked me why I did I do it. On fb if anybody asked I don’t know.”
Interestingly, many of these responses also note the fact that, since the respondent had not logged in, s/he had not seen the reaction from Facebook friends. Such statements carry a “don’t know, don’t care” connotation about friends’ reactions on Facebook. This topic predicts decreased likelihood of reversion.
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 Would you feel sad if no one tried to contact you after you deactivate your Facebook account? Feel free to leave us a comment.  | 
Reference
Baumer, E.P.S., Guha, S., Quan, E., Mimno, D., & Gay, G. (2015). How Non-use Experiences Influence the Likelihood of Social Media Reversion: Perceived Addiction, Boundary Negotiation, Subjective Mood, and Social Connections. Social Media + Society.
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