Consider our daffy digital world:
- We are irritated if our text isn’t answered within a few minutes—“Where are you?!”
- We feel naked without our phones.
- We check our devices first thing in the morning and last thing at night.
- We try to keep up with the happenings of our 1000 “close” friends on Facebook. (Do I really want to see every photo you snap?)
- One survey found that the average American checks his e-mail just under 200 times per day!
Like
most of us, Nicholas Carr found the digital experience exhilarating. He was captivated
by the speed of the Internet, the search engines, the sound, the videos,
everything. But then, he recalls, “the serpent of doubt slithered into my
info-paradise.” Maybe the net wasn’t so great. He discovered that his habits
were changing, morphing to accommodate a digital way of life. His ability to
pay attention was declining. “At first I had figured that the problem was a
symptom of middle-age mind rot. But my brain, I realized, wasn’t just drifting.
It was hungry. It was demanding to be fed the way the net did it – and the more
it was fed, the hungrier it became.”
The
recent death of comedian George Carlin caused me to search YouTube for some of
his routines. Soon I had spent over an hour listening to the good, the bad, and
the vulgar humor of Mr. Carlin. If that type of activity became a regular
pattern, it could squeeze out time with God, time with family and friends. I don’t want to become a
“compulsive nimbler of info-snacks” which fill me up and take the place of the
meat I need to grow up in the faith.
So what can we addicts do? When Alan Fadling’s family decided to turn off their devices while they spent an evening playing Catchphrase, he felt resistance rising in himself: “I really have important things I should be doing.” Then he came to his senses: “What was more important than unhurried time spent enjoying my bride and my three teenage sons?”
What
do we really need a phone for? When Jeff Haanen answered that question he made changes
that changed his life. As I began
deleting apps and setting new boundaries, I found myself catching an appealing
vision of a better—and slower—life. And my phone once again became just a tool,
to be used like all good things given by God. (James 1:17)
Consider
other boundaries with? Can you go an hour without checking your inbox? Can you
delay a response to a text because you are engaged in another activity? Can you
read your Bible in the morning before you check overnight messages? Can you
trash someone’s appeal to watch a video? We all receive e-mails that claim: “I
don’t normally forward messages, but you have to watch this.” I now seldom open
those messages. The most effective way to beat an addiction is to starve it.
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