Sip Carefully: When spilling the tea becomes a public mess

SITI SALBIAH NORAZAN

VOICES IN CONTEXT

SITI SALBIAH NORAZAN
26 Jul 2025 12:27pm
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WE are living in a digital age where personal lives are no longer just private affairs - they are content.

A simple tap on Instagram Stories or a tweet beginning with “let me spill some tea” can turn into a public spectacle, often at the expense of someone's dignity. The phrase “spill the tea”, once light-hearted internet slang for gossip, has evolved into something more damaging.

On Malaysian social media, it’s increasingly common to see private disputes, failed marriages, family drama and even intimate details of someone’s breakdown being laid bare for strangers to consume, judge and share.

A Culture Shift: From Gossip to Public Humiliation

What used to be whispered in close circles has now become clickbait. Platforms like TikTok, X (Twitter) and Instagram have enabled a culture where exposing the disgrace (aib) of others is not only normalised, but celebrated with likes, shares and viral fame.

Marriage issues, infidelity, toxic in-laws and messy break-ups are no longer topics of quiet reflection or dignified resolution, they're treated as entertainment.

And more often than not, they are shared under the guise of 'awareness', 'venting', or even 'healing'. But are we truly healing, or simply humiliating?

In cultures that value respect, privacy and emotional boundaries, the rise of oversharing, especially when it involves others’ private lives, signals not just a shift in habits but a collapse of basic decency.

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The Double Standard of Digital Morality

Ironically, while many users condemn cyberbullying or 'cancel culture', they often participate in gossip threads, screenshots and blind items that ruin reputations. The digital audience is quick to judge, slow to reflect.

Worse still, once something is online, it’s never truly gone. What might be a moment of emotional impulse or a cry for validation becomes permanent digital residue, impacting not only the individual involved but also their families, children and communities.

During a Coldplay concert, Astronomer's CEO Andy Byron and Head of HR Kristin Cabot were caught embracing on the kiss cam - both reportedly married to others, which instantly ignited a social media firestorm and escalated into the biggest global scandal as the incident exposed their identities, led to Byron's resignation, and sparked international debate about privacy, corporate ethics, and public shaming. (Internet Photo)
During a Coldplay concert, Astronomer's CEO Andy Byron and Head of HR Kristin Cabot were caught embracing on the kiss cam - both reportedly married to others, which instantly ignited a social media firestorm and escalated into the biggest global scandal as the incident exposed their identities, led to Byron's resignation, and sparked international debate about privacy, corporate ethics, and public shaming. (Internet Photo)

The Consequences We Overlook

Spilling someone else’s personal story can have real-world effects: job loss, family rifts, mental health decline or legal repercussions. And yet, the line between public interest and private invasion has become dangerously blurred.

Moreover, for individuals in crisis, the pressure to share their side of the story online creates an unhealthy feedback loop where trauma is commodified and resolution is replaced by revenge.

Choosing Decency Over Drama

This is not a call for silence, but for wisdom.

There’s a difference between speaking up on important issues such as abuse or injustice, and airing every disagreement or emotional hurt in a public forum.

If we are to preserve the values of respect, dignity and community, we must re-evaluate how we use our platforms.

Not everything needs to be posted. Not every heartbreak is a hashtag. And not every tea needs to be spilled.

Social media is a powerful tool but with great reach comes great responsibility. Let's choose decency over drama, and reflection over reaction.

Dr Siti Salbiah Norazan is a senior lecturer at the Faculty of Arts and Science, Universiti Malaya-Wales (UM-Wales). The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of Sinar Daily.

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