Last week I experienced something that every social media professional quietly fears but hopes will never happen: I lost access to my Instagram account.
If you’re reading this because your Instagram account was suddenly suspended or disabled and you’re trying to figure out what to do next, you’re not alone and I’m sharing exactly what I’m going through in real time.
Screenshot of the initial email notification informing me that my Instagram account had been suspended.
Not just one account, but several.
The suspension notice was sent to my personal Instagram account. Because multiple accounts were connected through Meta’s system, my business account and other associated accounts were also affected.
My personal account, my business account for Take Flight Social Media Consulting, and even a client account I manage were suddenly suspended at the same time. The reason given was a violation related to community standards surrounding child exploitation and nudity; an accusation that was both shocking and completely unfounded.
For context, I have been on Instagram since 2011. In all that time, I have never received a warning, violation notice, or suspension of any kind. My accounts contain years of photos, writing, client work, and content I have personally created.
And yet, within minutes, it was all gone.
The Moment Everything Stopped
On the evening of March 4, I received an email stating that my account had been suspended and that I needed to take action to appeal.
I immediately followed the steps Instagram provided:
verifying my email
verifying my phone number
submitting an appeal
Within roughly an hour, the account was permanently disabled.
That’s when the real panic set in.
Because Instagram accounts can be connected through Meta’s Accounts Center, other accounts connected to my device and login were also affected. Suddenly I was locked out of multiple accounts, including a client account that I manage professionally.
When your work revolves around social media, losing access isn’t just frustrating and it can impact your business and your clients.
The Support Vortex
What followed was a crash course in how difficult it can be to reach an actual human at a major tech company. Nearly every support path required logging into the account that had just been disabled. Help pages looped back to login screens. Appeal pages required authentication I could no longer complete.
At one point, I started searching everywhere I could think of for answers. I scoured Reddit threads and TikTok videos to see if anyone else had experienced something similar. To my surprise, I quickly realized I was far from alone. Many other users were describing nearly identical situations where accounts were suddenly suspended, appeals denied almost instantly, and very few ways to reach an actual person for help. In a strange way, that discovery was both frustrating and comforting. Frustrating because it suggests this is a broader issue that platforms like Meta still need to address, but comforting because it reminded me that I wasn’t the only person navigating this confusing and stressful process.
I attempted:
the Instagram Help Center
account recovery options
identity verification
Meta privacy request portals
email contacts associated with data requests
Each path ultimately led back to the same problem: you must log in to get help. Which is impossible when the account itself is disabled.
Identity Verification… and Rejection
For one of my accounts, Instagram requested additional identity verification.
I submitted a photo of my driver’s license and completed the video selfie verification process. Shortly afterward, I received another email stating that my ID could not be accepted and that the account had been permanently disabled.
At that point, the situation became both surreal and incredibly frustrating.
A Few Other Strange Discoveries
While trying to piece together what might have happened, several other concerning details emerged.
First, my husband discovered an Instagram account using my name and a biography I had previously used. It wasn’t my account.
As we tried to make sense of what had happened, my husband also raised another possibility: that the suspension could have been triggered by user reports. Most platforms rely not only on automated systems but also on reports submitted by other users.
My personal Instagram account is private, and while it hasn’t always been, I am very careful about approving new followers. Even so, it made me pause and think about the broader group of people who follow or have followed my account over the years.
Like many people, I occasionally share commentary in my Instagram stories, which disappear after 24 hours; these range from current events, public policy, issues affecting women and immigration to the new Harry Styles album and images of small glimmers that bring me joy from time to time.
To be clear, I have no evidence that anyone reported my account or that this played any role in what happened. But the experience did make me reflect on how little control we sometimes have over the systems that govern social media platforms. A single report, misunderstanding, or automated flag can trigger a chain reaction that temporarily removes years of content and access in an instant.
Around the same time, I received a notification through the Shop app that a refurbished phone had been purchased and shipped to an address that does not belong to me.
Whether these issues are connected or simply unfortunate coincidences is still unclear.
The Human Cost of Automated Moderation
I understand that platforms like Instagram must rely heavily on automated systems to monitor billions of pieces of content.
But automated moderation systems are not perfect.
When they make mistakes, the consequences can be significant:
years of personal photos disappear
businesses lose access to marketing channels
consultants temporarily lose access to client accounts
and users are left trying to navigate a maze of automated support systems
It is a reminder that while social media platforms feel permanent, we are ultimately building on infrastructure we do not control.
The Steps I Took
In the days following the suspension, I documented everything and pursued every available avenue.
submitted formal appeals
completed identity verification
attempted data access requests
filed a consumer complaint with the California Attorney General
contacted Instagram through multiple published support channels
compiled documentation of the entire situation
It was time-consuming and, frankly, exhausting; both physically and emotionally.
But documentation matters.
An Encouraging Update
As of today, one of the affected accounts, a client account, has already been reinstated after review, with Instagram acknowledging that the action had been taken in error.
That alone gives me hope that the remaining accounts may also be restored after additional review.
A Reminder for Small Business Owners
This experience reinforced several lessons that I now share with all of my clients:
Always keep copies of your content. Social platforms should not be your only archive.
Enable two-factor authentication.
Document everything if something goes wrong.
Understand that automated systems sometimes make mistakes.
And perhaps most importantly:
5. Your online presence is valuable, but it is not entirely within your control.
Lessons Learned
If there is anything positive to take away from this experience, it’s the reminder that the digital tools we rely on every day are not infallible.
Platforms like Instagram and Facebook are powered by increasingly sophisticated automated systems designed to review content and enforce community standards at a massive scale. Artificial intelligence and automation make it possible to monitor billions of posts every day, but they are not perfect. And when mistakes happen, the consequences can ripple through personal lives and businesses very quickly.
This experience has made me more mindful about every post, comment, and share, even those that disappear after 24 hours in Stories. Automation can interpret things in ways humans never intended, and the reality is that the systems making these decisions are often working without the nuance or context that a human reviewer might bring.
It has also reminded me how much these platforms have quietly become part of our daily routines. Like many people, I turn to social media for entertainment, news, inspiration, and connection. Over time it becomes a place where friendships continue, ideas are exchanged, and life is documented in real time.
What has surprised me most during this process was the emotional realization that so many memories live inside these platforms. Years of photos and captions documenting my children growing up, family vacations, meals shared with friends, books read, and places explored. Losing access, even temporarily, made me realize how much of my personal history exists in a space I ultimately do not control.
It also made me think about the connections we maintain through these networks. There are people in my life I may not see regularly but remain connected to through posts, stories, and small daily updates. Those relationships still exist outside of social media, of course, but platforms have made it easier to stay present in each other’s lives.
Perhaps the biggest lesson is this: social media is an incredible tool, but it should never be the only place where our memories, our work, or our connections live.
Backups matter.
Documentation matters.
And as automation continues to shape the online world, understanding the systems behind the platforms we use becomes more important than ever.
Final Thoughts
I am hopeful that this situation will be resolved soon. If it is, I will be grateful and relieved.
But regardless of the outcome, the experience has been a powerful reminder that the systems we rely on to build businesses and communities online are not infallible.
Sometimes they get it wrong.
And when they do, the road back can be unexpectedly complicated.
If you ever find yourself in a similar situation, know that you are not alone, and persistence, documentation, and patience can go a long way.
More updates to come…..