Something that digital media has
changed is how time works for us; to be more specific, we no longer enjoy any idle
time. We are always on. Our. Phones. Did our friend run a little late
and now we’re stuck at the coffee shop alone for a few ten minutes? Subdue that
awkwardness by getting busy on your phone. The metro’s not here until a couple
minutes? Get on the phone. Is it that time of day where I must now go wind down
on the toilet? Yup…I’m bringing my phone. We spend all of our free time on our
phones whether it involves mindlessly scrolling through our social media news
and discover feeds, looking back at our photo albums, checking our email every
ten minutes for any updates, reading whatever human interest piece, and so on.
We stopped actually having true free time because we use whatever time
left from our duties to go on our phones and browse the internet.
This is a
problem because it is during our times of idleness where we can actually stop
and think for a bit. Instead of reflecting on our days or on a certain moment
that bothered us, we have—possibly without knowing or trying to—found an escape
by retreating to our phones instead. During times that we could actually relax
and give our minds a break from all the stimulation and business, we occupy it
with a bunch of junk that it remains cluttered. We have essentially forgotten
how to actually relax and let our minds be. But there is something else at
stake besides what first appears as lost idleness. I have read in a few
articles that, because we are not giving ourselves the space and time to reflect
and such, we are precluding ourselves from producing creative thoughts. We don’t
daydream much anymore and lie around doing literally nothing, which
might stop us from coming up with ideas or resolving some emotional issue in
our heads because we are too distracted by our phones and computers. We don’t
give ourselves permission to just be, if only for a few minutes, in silence
(physical or mental). And maybe that’s why we say that our best thoughts come
to us in the shower when we’re alone with our thoughts and without phones (maybe
it’s a good thing they’re not waterproof).
I think
that the best solution for this is to practice something akin to meditation (or
to practice meditation itself). We must learn how to balance our time and our
space. This means that when we have free time, sure…we can look at our phones
for a bit, but this action should not corrupt all of our free time. We must
grow a little more conscious of these habits and learn when it is best to not
look at our phones and instead just sit there and think. We must give ourselves
space to unplug and be away from our devices and from people. We should also
learn to not stigmatize the idea of lying around “doing nothing” or spacing out,
as though it were “unproductive,” because these moments can also be beneficial for
us at least in how they can clear our minds from the clutter of digital media.
One article that speaks about this problem:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/inspired-life/wp/2016/02/02/a-stanford-psychologist-explains-why-spacing-out-and-goofing-off-is-so-good-for-you/?utm_term=.5a6810df6226
I completely agree that humans now have a desire to be constantly entertained. A great way to encourage personal growth is to go to a restaurant by yourself with a book or newspaper maybe but never take your phone out to randomly use time. Learning to be by ourselves without digital entertainment really helps us be in-tune with ourselves and what is going on around us.
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