“I’m good at Multi-tasking“, has become a modern euphemism for “Delusions have made my carelessness measurable.“
Last year I made the hard decision of purchasing my first smartphone. The Pros ended up out-weighing the Cons, like having something better to read while seated on the toilet other than shampoo bottle instructions. But deep down, I knew I was giving up something invaluable the moment I bought it; my space for tranquility and depth of thought in solitude.
In the 1980’s, futurist Alvin Toffler coined the term “Information Overload” in his book Future Shock predicting where technology was heading in our society. According to a San Diego University study, the average American citizen today is bombarded with 100,500 words and digests around 12 hours of information and media every single day.
And if you think about it, 12 hours isn’t so much of an exaggeration. With notifications, emails, texts, voicemails, “likes”, Instagram pictures and tweets, comments, tags and posts, as well as, photos, videos, headlines, blogs, subscriptions, downloads, uploads,ads, ringtones, mp3’s, apps, games, usernames, passwords, captchas, folders, files, feeds, searches and poke’s … it’s hardly surprising why we’re always so busy.
Saturate My Senses
We live in an extrospective society, one that thinks happiness is found in the outside world. We tend to believe wholeheartedly that the more we cram every living moment with outside sources of enjoyment, excitement and pleasure, the more we’re living.
Life is often thought in outward terms, as a series of events that unfolds in the physical world that we all inhabit. However, we experience all these events that happen in life inwardly through our thoughts and feelings. This is the reality for each of us.
We are the surround-sound generation with 1,000 channels. We want to feel everything all the time. A walk through the park isn’t just a walk anymore, it’s a music concerto with our iPod, while feasting on a burger, and a work-out as well, with our electronic heart-monitors, all while admiring the passing carnival of humanity.
Creativity and thought have become subservient to the singular ambition of saturating our senses. Stimulation has become the new world order. Depth of focus is obsolete.
It’s Not The Quantity, But The Depth
The irony of our times is that we have more “friends” and know more about their activities and interests than ever … by spending less time with them.
We are also more than ever proficient through technology. But we achieve much more by superficially immersing ourselves in every activity we do, by dividing our attention and focus. Take me as an example. During the writing of this article I’ve digressed in checking my emails, watching 5 videos, buying a book and learning that Google is planning to set up a free global WiFi network!
When I go out on walks I don’t feel that peacefulness and thrill of solitude anymore. I come across a beautiful bird and immediately I feel like “possessing” that moment for later. I pull out my phone to take a photo, and begin to feel the anxiety that any sudden movements might frighten it away. I give up the chance of being entirely and absorbingly present in that moment, in exchange for the anxiety of admiring a photo of it in the future.
I continue my walk and feel my phone vibrating. It’s a notification that either someone has recommended a movie to me, or I received a comment or “like” online, I have an overdue bill, someone just had a baby, a tsunami just killed hundreds in South Asia, or my uncle is getting a Colonoscopy. Perhaps you have realized this before, but all of these distractions are impediments to the ability to immerse ourselves in each place we find ourselves in.
But worst of all, technology takes away from us the one thing we require the most for depth of thought and creativity: aloneness. I’ve felt so many times as though I’m taking the whole world with me when I carry my phone. There’s never any time or space away from our daily business anymore.
Respite From Technology
The other day I saw a man talking in a public phone booth. It is such a rare thing that all I could assume was that he was being told where to drop off the ransom money.
We keep upgrading software and finding faster ways to download. Unknowingly, as we increase the intensity of our ties to other people we are cementing the bars to our own technological prisons. The more connected we are, the more we depend on the world outside ourselves to tell us how to think and live.
The more we depend on technology and live our lives absorbed in it’s brightly alluring screens, the more fearful we become as well. Just think of all the hundreds of stories of murders, suicides, rapes, mass casualties, abuses, tortures and other horrific stories that we let into our lounge rooms and bedrooms on a daily basis. All of this violence takes it’s toll on us.
It’s easy to blame all this on all of our tools. I’m not trying to say that technology is the spawn of Satan – technology makes our lives much more convenient and pleasurable. It’s not technology that is at fault, instead, everything began with the simple goal of keeping “in touch” with everything and everyone. With our constant desire for extrospective stimulation we’ve turned that into “never being out of touch”, making our every day feel more frantic and rushed.
This need to “never be out of touch” has been attributed by psychologists, to conditions like attention deficit disorder.  It has been the cause of Nomophobia, which is “the fear of being out of mobile phone contact”.  The need to never be out of touch is so great, that around the world rehabilitation centers have been opened for technologically addicted children.
In my opinion, creativity and depth of thought has highly been affected by the need to never be out of touch as well. Just look at modern day children, supposedly the most creative beings there are. They rarely go on lavish imaginary adventures anymore, or sit down to make figurines out of popsicle sticks, or make their own hand-drawn comic books. To them, as well as us, reality seems too silent, too frustratingly inert and non-interactive. The sense of wonder and mystery is being lost.
Sure, many solutions have been proposed. There’s software like Inbox Pause that puts your messages on hold. There are other services that limit the amount of time you spend online or block every ad and piece of jargon around the contents of a webpage.
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But the more we connect through technology, the more our thoughts lean outwards. What makes life meaningful is your inner feelings, your passions, your dreams and to cultivate those you require introspection, deep mental focus and self-discovery.
Technology brings the burden that anyone, any information, anywhere is always within reach. This makes you feel that you should be taking advantage of all the information, and that you should fill your time with as much stimulation as you can.
I hope some of you feel a desire to be away from the tumult of the technological crowd the same way I do. In order to fully enjoy technology, it would be a wise idea to learn to cultivate time disconnected away from the eternal cyber buzz around us.
If there’s anything that I’ve learned, it’s that only when you learn to be comfortable with your solitude, without the need of stimulation, will you become inwardly content. When you drop the need for others and other things to stimulate you, you can then develop the ability to think of other people with more care and interest. It’s not about what they can provide for you anymore. In the comfort of your aloneness, you can ask yourself instead: What can I provide them?
Try taking some time out to put some space between yourself and the cyber crowd, otherwise you might get lost in the Technological Labyrinth.
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I have already noticed a disconnect in how I and others communicate with each other. I am trying to get off of the various social medias as well as trying to limit texting or not texting at dinners, in class, etc.
Really great post… Just this morning I was talking to a friend who is having problems with stress and anxiety. She keeps saying how “my phone is my lifeline” and how she can’t turn it off because she needs to “be there” for this person and that person… when I suggested she turn it off so that she could be present for herself and find a bit of solitude she admitted to feeling physical panic at the thought. We are allowing other people and entities like work to become more and more invasive, and we have less and less to offer those closest to us as a result. We have less and less to offer ourselves, and we are truly living less and less. I hate going to concerts these days…because I can’t help getting frustrated by all those around me watching the action on their tiny cellphone display while the artist they paid good money to see is live in the flesh right in front of them. How much attention can they really be paying to the music when they are constantly fooling around with their phone and uploading things to Facebook????? The worst part about it all is… Read more »
I was looking for how people in modern society have “disconnected from society” and self indulged in technology as a way to have “personal space” yet indirectly cause more harm than good. So I typed in my google bar the moment I thought of it, it was “technology and the disconnection from reality”. Now here I am. I mention it in this post because not only is it true that we have in a sense forced ourselves to be consistently saturate with information, but the fact that I am doing a research project on technology and it’s effect on health, and I am the last person to hand in my paper, and the only person of my class mates to talk about the mental effects. The whole class is talking about how it affects physical health! Wheres the creativity in the research, a project, even a painting anymore? This article has brought me a lot of understand and ideas on what our problem as tech junkies and social networking trolls. I say to the person I am today, writing this post, I will and I am going to relinquish my technology based uses and substitute my own inner desires of… Read more »
I love this post! I’m constantly being told by friends and peers that I need to get an instagram, a pinterest, etc. etc. Just this past year I FINALLY got a Facebook for the sole reason that I needed it to communicate and receive information from my college. My life started to feel more hectic just by this addition of technology alone, but slowly I am making my way back to the time when I would spend an entire day reading a book.
I have all notifications (except phone and text messages) turned off. I normally don’t get many of either anyway. I also have an iPad, but I set certain times for myself on when I can use it. Typically I use it the same way as my computer, meaning I look up pictures for drawing or writing inspiration, or researching things I love to learn about. When I’m not using it, I purposely make a point to put it away.
I hope this helps anyone who needs ideas on how to manage the technology in your life.
Small anecdote: A kid in front of my school almost got run over because he was crossing the road while playing a game on his phone. Utterly stupid, especially since it was a pretty busy road. Extreme example, but a good one none-the-less, I feel.
Nomophobia!?!?!? I think its time I got started on that “SAVE HUMANITY” proposal!
In the past few years I’ve become, more or less, a Neo-Luddite… I’ve never owned a cell phone or any portable gadget worth mentioning beyond watches and radios… Today I just can’t stand what this world has become with these phone-headed zombies walking around yapping and tapping frantically about absolutely nothing of any value! People make fun of me for this: for not being One of the collective “intelligence” of morons… They are all conformists and Slaves to Technology! I don’t think these people can Think without being “connected” in some way… And of course it’s all about conspicuous consumption and Status symbols… Just look at them frantically rushing out to buy the latest i-whatever to prove their worth! Furthermore, with my strong electronics background I’m certainly convinced about the physical dangers of electro-pollution and the like (I won’t bore you with it all, basically we’re talking Profit over People: cancer and other ailments are up, Way Way Up, and it’s not a coincidence that more and more of these damned Masts are going up everywhere!)… I limit my “communication” to this decade-old desktop computer, for it’s quite sufficient for my simple purposes of reading a few websites and sending… Read more »
I agree with your post wholeheartedly Especially as a young adult who had to grow up during this technological revolution, I feel it has made me feel even more lost and frustrated with the outside world. Sometimes I just want to runaway from it all and completely block off all sensory input. It is sad that people are so dependent on a hunk of metal to keep them satisfied rather than finding enjoyment from within themselves.
i adore this post! It is a message I hope to spread with my own writing.
A few years ago I felt peaceful and content. During that time I was reading a lot of books and sharing ideas with others. I used technology but I did not live for its chimes, beeps and alerts. I started to realize that multi-tasking did more harm than good.
I am inching my way back to that delightful state. I think printed books are more relaxing than online reading but I cherish any reading that that isn’t governed by time constraints.
Thanks for a wonderful post. I may link to it.
This is SO true! Especially if you have Computer Addiction!