The Hypervisible and The Unseen - Algorithms, Body Image and the Fragile Self : Episode 22
🎧 Episode 22: The Hypervisible and the Unseen - Algorithms, Body Image, and the Fragile Self
What happens when we become more visible than ever before, yet feel increasingly unseen? And why does the digital world so often leave us feeling disconnected from ourselves rather than more understood?
In this episode of Mind the Body, I explore the psychological impact of algorithms, AI, and social media through the lens of psychoanalysis, attachment theory, and body image. Inspired by a recent seminar by psychoanalyst Alessandra Lemma, I examine how our relationship with technology is reshaping not only the way we see ourselves, but the very development of the self itself.
Drawing on the work of Alessandra Lemma, Donald Winnicott, Esther Bick, contemporary research on AI and adolescent mental health, and my own BTA Triangle framework (Body Image, Trauma, and Attachment), I explore why body image is ultimately not about appearance, but about recognition, embodiment, and the experience of feeling real.
Ultimately, this episode asks what happens when the algorithm becomes our primary mirror, why visibility is not the same as being known, and how healing requires us to move from surveillance back into relationship.
In This Episode:
* What Alessandra Lemma means by "hypervisible disappearance"
* The difference between being seen and simply being watched
* How algorithms become a false psychological container for the fragile self
* Why AI functions as a "psychic prosthesis" for unmet attachment needs
* How body image disturbance reflects a crisis of embodiment rather than appearance
* Why labels, metrics and online validation cannot replace genuine self-understanding
* How healing begins through relationships that restore curiosity, embodiment, and the experience of being truly known
A Question to Sit With:
When you reach for your phone, are you searching to be visible -or are you longing to feel truly seen?
Free Resource:
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References:
Bick, E. (1968). The experience of the skin in early object relations. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 49, 484–486.
Lemma, A. (2009). Being seen or being watched? A psychoanalytic perspective on body dysmorphia. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 90(4), 753–771.
Lemma, A. (2023). Psychotechnical Becomings: Psychoanalysis, Identity, Desire, and Mourning in the Age of AI and Digital Mediation. Routledge.
Lemma, A. (2026, June 18). From Scrolling to Working Through: Adolescence, Algorithms and the Search for Coherence. Brent Centre Seminar, Dean's Yard, London.
McBain, R. K., Cantor, J. H., Breslau, J., et al. (2026). AI chatbot use and disclosure for mental health among US adolescents and young adults. [https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/fullarticle/2849307?__cf_chl_f_tk=uRoyDPTv1xGLhme5KZdKfkZGfaVak9C6s4chEncYRlQ-1782995488-1.0.1.1-3N0VyRzP0pla90CvIbKHMwnGsw6sI9F9HRK5xvBfyEs] JAMA Pediatrics. Published online June 1, 2026.
Winnicott, D. W. (1971). Playing and Reality. Tavistock.
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