WhatsApp. WhatsApp was described as a very
practical tool for coordinating and organising social
life. Whether this meant arranging to go to the cinema
with a friend, inviting their children to dinner, going
on a day trip with a group of friends, managing a
shared holiday home, coordinating telephone calls,
the care of grandchildren or confirming attendance to
club events, WhatsApp was widely used to arrange
appointments of all sorts. Group chats were especially
mentioned as practical to organise and coordinate
reoccurring or one-time events. Another use and
motivation of family chats was the coordination of the
care for a sick or older family member.
Speed and immediacy were other positive practical
aspects of WhatsApp. The rapidity allowed
informants to send spontaneous invitations to their
children, let them know they were dropping by, or ask
their spouse to buy some groceries on the way home.
Many of our informants were able to use WhatsApp
with mobile data, allowing them to quickly let other
people know if they were running late for an
appointment.
WhatsApp was stated to be quick and practical in
coordinating between several people and had the
benefit of being unintrusive, leaving the receiver the
time to answer at his or her convenience. The
inhibition to contact other people, for fear of
disturbing them was low.
4.5 Enriching Everyday Life
In general, WhatsApp was associated with light,
interesting and pleasurable contents. Informants
stated that they would never discuss sensitive matters
over WhatsApp. They were unanimously of the
opinion, that conflicts and serious discussions should
be discussed face-to-face “at a table” or at least on the
telephone, where they would be able to hear their
counterpart's voice. Some reported forwarding jokes,
funny pictures or videos to others, after careful
consideration, whether the recipient would be
interested in the content or not. Irrelevant or
inappropriate content they received was ignored or
immediately deleted. Taken together, our informants
stressed the positivity and the pleasure of messages
received and sent.
Our interviewees mentioned only a few negative
experiences with WhatsApp, including handling
problems and misunderstandings caused by
autocorrect mistakes. Some interviewees further
mentioned that feeling pressured into answering
messages as soon as possible. Taken together, these
negative aspects did not seem salient in our
participants' memories and didn't lead to giving up, or
not using WhatsApp.
5 DISCUSSION
Our results show that older adults' communication via
WhatsApp focuses strongly on socio-emotionally
meaningful interactions. Older adults use WhatsApp
to create, maintain and intensify meaningful ties. Not
only the relation to their conversation partners but
also the shared content is predominantly positive, of
interest and emotionally meaningful to older users.
These findings are consistent with Carstensen's
theory of socioemotional selectivity. The older adults
reported almost no misunderstandings or conflicts
carried out via WhatsApp, an indication of the
capacity to successfully regulate emotions and not get
carried away (Carstensen, Fung, & Charles, 2003).
Receiving a WhatsApp message is a sign of
attention and stills the need to be seen or noticed. One
of our informants described it as a “digital caress”.
WhatsApp fulfilled the need for belonging and
relatedness and in the role of both receiver and
sender, our informants spoke of pleasure and
lightness. Previous studies draw upon theories of
human needs, to explain the popularity of WhatsApp
among younger adults (Karapanos, Teixeira,
Gouveia, 2015; Kim, Wang, & Oh, 2016). Sheldon
lists relatedness, pleasure-stimulation and popularity
as universal human needs (Sheldon, Elliot, Kim, &
Kasser, 2001). Our findings reveal, that WhatsApp
use can satisfy these human needs for older adults.
All our informants navigated a mix of mediated
communication channels mainly including e-mails,
telephone calls (landline and mobile), SMS and more
rarely letters, greeting cards, social media and other
instant messaging services. In comparison to these,
WhatsApp was described as unintrusive,
spontaneous, light, quick and easy, but only for
consciously chosen and fitting occasions and
relationships. WhatsApp was thus used to arrange
phone calls, which without prior arrangement might
be disturbing or pushy.
By using WhatsApp interviewees discover new
ways of maintaining contacts and communication,
nonintrusive, spontaneous, light, quick and delightful
ways of communication. Making a phone-call or
writing an e-mail is in comparison to this an act of
communication, that demands more time, calm and
attention. The possibility to exchange snapshots of
one's day to day life easily leads to a stronger feeling
of relatedness and intensity of a relationship without
however changing the character of the relationship