Is it time to disconnect from a
hyper-connected world?
It was a Whatsapp message from my nephew
that first alerted me to the fact that something was up. “Hello, I’m not going
to be using a phone any more,” he announced cheerily to all his contacts. “If
you’d like to get in touch, I’d be delighted to hear from you on email.” It’s
now been a few weeks since that announcement and Arjun maintains that he’s
never been more at peace than since he gave up on his phone. There are no
incessant calls and messages, both personal and professional, no constant notifications
from social media platforms; instead there is blessed quiet in which he can
hear himself think.
I would have dismissed this as just my
nephew being his usual eccentric self – he did, after all, give up on being a
successful lawyer to train in drama therapy – if I hadn’t meet many other
millennials since then who also seem to be disenchanted by phones and what they
are doing to their lives.
One of them confessed that she felt so
stressed at the thought of having to take work calls at all hours of the day
that just the ring of her phone was enough to trigger an anxiety attack. Another
had deleted all social media apps like Twitter and Facebook from his phone, using
them only when he accessed his laptop, and felt much more productive as a
consequence. And then, there was the one who was so concerned by his ‘screen
time’ reports (did he really spend 2.3 hours on Instagram on average every
day?) that he had downloaded an app that automatically cut off his Internet
usage once he had breached a certain time limit.
I could go on, but you probably get the
point. I certainly did, and inspired by these young people, over the last
fortnight I have attempted to bring down my ‘screen time’ as well (no, you
really don’t want to know how long I spend on Twitter every day) and see if that
helps me concentrate better on the book that I am working on at the moment. My
way of doing this was to activate ‘Airplane mode’ when I sat down to write, so
I had to perforce focus on my writing rather than disappear down the rabbit
hole that is the Internet.
I must admit that it wasn’t easy to begin
with. With an almost Pavlovian response, my fingers kept reaching out for the
Twitter or Instagram icon, as my attention wandered from the computer screen in
front of me. But when the feed would not – or more accurately, could not –
refresh – I had no option but to turn back to my writing. The first few days
were tough as my brain rewired itself to focus on one task rather than flitting
from one to another as it had become accustomed to doing. But after a period of
time, I actually began to look forward to these islands of time when I could
concentrate on one thing to the exclusion of all else. And now, two weeks
later, I can’t even begin to sit down to write without first activating ‘Airplane
mode’ on my phone.
One happy outcome of this is over the
last fortnight, my screen time is down by 47 per cent. And it would be even
lower if it wasn’t for the fact that I have downloaded the Kindle app on my
phone and do all my late-night reading on it. The time I spend reading news sites is still a
bit high, but I justify it to myself by calling it work (which, in a way, it
is) rather than pleasure. I dip into Twitter only once or twice a day, and I
feel much calmer – and much less outraged! – as a consequence. And I treat
Instagram like a late-night treat rather than an hourly indulgence, which makes
me appreciate it a lot more.
I am now pushing the envelope a little
further by leaving my phone behind when I go on my daily walks. It felt a bit
strange at first, not being able to listen to music or an audio book as I
ambled through Lodhi Garden. But as I walked on, I began to appreciate the real
world around me a lot more when I didn’t have a distracting soundtrack playing
in my ear. I drank in the beauty of the flowery verges, the majesty of the
monuments that suddenly sprang up on me, and the sweet sound of birdsong as the
sun set on another day.
In a way it was a throwback to a gentler
time, to my mobile phone-free youth, when I used to leave work in the evening
and head straight out for a bracing walk secure in the knowledge that nobody
could get hold of me for the next hour or so no matter how hard they tried.
This is not a feeling that most young people these days are at all familiar
with, given the hyper-connectedness of their lives, when they are never truly
off the grid. Work mails keep pouring in at all times, bosses Whatsapp at odd
hours and expect an instant comeback, and parents want to know exactly where
you are and what you are doing at any given time.
No wonder the poor dears want to turn
their phones on silent, or even switch the damn things off. In this day and
age, sadly, that’s the only way to get some peace and quiet – and a tiny sliver
of time to yourself.
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