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"I refuse to use a mobile phone and I'm all the happier for it"
On 20 December 2012 I wrote a blog under the title of “Is the Web Driving Us Mad?”. Let me quote a passage or two from it, much relevant to today’s blog:
“The other day, I “Successfully” de-activated my Facebook account. I say “Successfully”, because Facebook does not make it easy to say good bye, even though I was just trying a short-term separation and not a divorce! At least for now.
You know, given human weaknesses to addiction, that is any form of addiction, I thought I was watching me and watching you to see if you were watching me, a bit too much: Watching who likes or unlike whatever I post there. As if one click here or there is enough for me to know how good or bad I am doing!
My mind was going “digital” and I was becoming “virtual”: And I said to myself, Hey Kamran, watch where you are going man!
I thought I needed a time out, a time for some reflection and soul-searching. I do not know if you, too, are facing the same or not. But, here we go, I just discovered an article: “Is the Web Driving Us Mad?” that I want to share with you.”…
I suppose some may say that I may be a bit strange, going against the tides of modernity and progress! OK, I understand. But today I am happy that I have found two other allies sharing the same with me.
One is the journalist John Naish and the other Professor Paul Dolan, an expert in psychology at the London School of Economics.
John writes that, “According to conventional wisdom, as a journalist I should be permanently plugged in to all the newest versions of every available communications gadget, sifting all the latest data like a good little information drone 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
The trouble is, when would I ever find the space or time to stop, digest and reflect on every flashing, beeping, sensational thing that had flooded into my head?
And when would I ever get the chance to relax properly, to allow my body and mind to restore themselves and for my imagination to run - essential for any kind of creative work?
But whenever I try to explain this to anyone, I notice in their eyes a mixture of worry and condescension that says: 'Weirdo.'”
John then tells us about his happiness when he notes the study by Prof. Dolan, who has warned that the everyday stress of using mobile phones may be sending us mad.
According to Dolan, we'd all be much more content if we turned off our mobiles and concentrated on friends and family rather than impulsively checking emails and text messages.
Enjoying human company is more rewarding than repeatedly looking at your phone, Professor Dolan told the Hay Festival.
He worries that the popularity of smartphones sees users constantly having their attention diverted from the people around them and towards these devices.
He further warns that unless people change their behaviour, they are putting themselves at risk of mental illness. This can develop, he believes, as a result of the constant nervous stress of checking phones and the distraction of switching their attention from one thing to another.
Professor Dolan isn't alone in blaming our addiction to smartphones for a range of modern ills.
In fact, just carrying the device around can cause chronic stress. This is amply shown by the rise of a common hallucination called 'phantom phone vibration syndrome'.
This, says Jeffrey Janata, director of behavioural medicine at University Hospitals in Cleveland, is an illusory sensation that your mobile phone is vibrating in your pocket when, in fact, no one is calling.
The mobile phone may not even be in your pocket. The false sensation is the result of constantly being in a state of anticipation, eternally expecting a call or text message.
There is even something called mobile phone insomnia - sleeplessness caused by the disruption of brainwaves during mobile-phone calls made before you go to bed.
James Horne and colleagues at Loughborough University's Sleep Research Centre have found that making mobile phone calls in the evening can dramatically reduce your chances of falling asleep easily.”…
Believe me. Surprise yourself. Give it a try: go a bit Facebook-less, moble phon-less. You never know, you might even enjoy yourself and all those around you.
Read more:
I refuse to use a mobile phone and I'm all the happier for it
Is the Web Driving Us Mad?
http://www.gcgi.info/blog/327-is-the-web-driving-us-mad
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- Written by: Kamran Mofid
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Margaret Thatcher had 'psychopathic tendencies' and was 'not in touch' emotionally- says actress who played the politician in her younger years
On 3 June 2011 I wrote a blog under the title of “The Broken Model”. Due to its relevance to this blog, I wish to note it once again:
“Do you remember that Margaret Thatcher, the so-called Iron Lady!! She told the Brits that she was going to put the “Great” back into the “Great” Britain. Do you remember? Then, she told us this can only happen if we accept and implement the “Washington Consensus”, the so-called dreaded neo-liberalism. She told us that there was no alternative. She told us we will all prosper and develop more fairly and equitably. She won election after elections. Everything was privatised, deregulated, self-regulated. Industry, manufacturing, (the real economy) was destroyed. Instead, the banks and the bankers were encouraged to rule the world. The economists with no principles and values were “bought” and the business schools, such as Harvard and Columbia were showered with money to act as “Cheer Leaders” for the dreaded neo-liberalism (see the Inside Job for evidence). Communities were dis-mantled and dis-organised. We were told that there is nothing as a society and community. We are all in it just for ourselves, we were told. Destructive competition at the expense of life-enhancing cooperation, collaboration and dialogue was greatly prompted. We were told to say no to love, kindness, generosity, sympathy and empathy and say yes to selfishness, individualism and narcissism, as these values will fire the engine of capitalism and wealth creation! In short, the hell with the common good, we were encouraged to believe.- Details
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The growing wealth gap is unsustainable
99% on their knees, whilst the 1% is laughing all the way to the banks
The ever-increasing many who are struggling cannot support a structure that favours a tiny number of the very rich
“Last month, Barack Obama, on his re-election to a country with 42 million living in poverty, warned: "America cannot succeed when a shrinking few do very well and a growing many barely make it." At the World Economic Forum in Davos, its founder, Klaus Schwab, said: "Capitalism in its current form no longer fits the world around us." How badly it "fits" is powerfully demonstrated in Inequality for All, a documentary made by Jacob Kornbluth, that recently won the special jury prize at the Sundance festival…
While the debate in the UK is mostly focused on growth and how best to engender it, Reich explains in chilling detail why growth alone may not be enough. For too many, he explains, social mobility has begun to slide backwards. A small but growing band of global pirates – billionaires all, without allegiance to community or country, devoid of civic responsibility – accrue wealth from the continued immiseration of the squeezed majority. These hugely rich are fawned over and subsidised by governments even as inequality widens to a chasm that may yet produce social unrest.- The Wisdom of "ubuntu": Giving and Sharing for the Common Good
- The Commodification of Life: A path to turn the citizens into neo-liberal consumers
- The greatest debate of them all: Imaging a dialogue between Marx, Keynes, Friedman and Schumacher on current global crises
- The Sorry State of British Universities: Could a university be the next HMV?
- Instead of unethical austerity let us kick start a housing construction