Is the Internet bad for you?
The
Internet is very useful. We use it for research, banking, shopping, and social
networking. I also use it to gather and store information, but mostly to stay
in touch with people all around the world. Social Media is the number one
activity on the web. And since I can access the Internet very easily from my
mobile devices, I rely on it for almost everything. I can’t remember the last
time my smart phone wasn’t next to me. The Internet is established as a very
important medium in our lives. I am a big user of computers and I am a huge fan
of technology. And luckily, technology is no longer for a small minority. Various
social networks appeal to different parts of the population. Almost every
member of my family has a Facebook account, from the youngest of them to the
oldest. It is a great way for all of us to stay in touch, especially that we
live on different continents. I choose to keep my profile private even though I
sense that privacy is lost in social networking. I tend to refuse requests from
strangers and I don’t request friends I do not know. Nevertheless, I enjoy participating
in family affairs, even if it is virtually.
Lately,
I began to realize that I am having a lot of trouble concentrating. I noticed
it particularly when I’d sit down to study. Throughout my life, reading a book
came naturally to me, but now I notice that after a couple of paragraphs or
pages, I begin to have this overwhelming urge to get up and check the net. I
start checking my email and clicking on links to all kinds of things. There is
a correspondence between my increasing use of the web and the use of digital
media. Over the last few years, the Internet expanded with the introduction of
all these powerful networking applications. I have accounts on Facebook,
Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat and so on (Follow me). And there are hundreds of
million other active users on a global basis. My inability to focus on one
thing for more than a few minutes concerns me the most. Apparently, there is
too much of an attachment to surf the web and it has become addictive. Our
intellectual technologies influence the way that we think. For example, years
ago, we needed a map to travel, and now we a have a Global Positioning System
that provides “location and time information in all weather conditions,
anywhere on or near the Earth.”
Nowadays,
looking for a map is an endless process; bookstores have scaled back in their
selection in recent years. Some stores have stopped selling maps altogether. They
claim that maps are pointless today. I consider printed maps a fun experience
when travelling because it requires the travelers to work together and become a
team. It tests our ability to get along and solve problems while the GPS
removes that entire interpersonal dynamic. Driving by map engages us actively
in our surroundings while the GPS encourages a passive form of journeying. Up until the map was invented, the only way
to perceive location was through direct sensory, and that’s how people got
around. Suddenly, we replaced our direct sensory apprehension of the world with
an abstract representation of the world. On one hand, it allowed us to do a
whole lot more of practical things like going to places we’ve never gone to
before with certainty. On the other hand, more broadly, it gave us a more
abstract way of thinking in general, and there are some deep cognitive and
intellectual consequences. We are hooked up to every form of communication, but
we’re not actually engaging and interacting with people. We have the social
skills of a microwave dinner and the more time we are spending online the more
we are getting incompetent at the area of sociability and social dynamics. How
we receive and deal with people is a skill that we are losing. Real world social
interactions diminished drastically.
Because
the majority of our time is spent online, it definitely has some effect on the
way we think and act. We have become too dependent on it that we can’t go a day
without disconnecting from reality to check the Internet. We live in incredibly
information-rich environment and we want to know everything that is going on
around us; therefore, it is promoting a compulsive behavior in which we constantly
check our smart phones. Moreover, we’re living in this perpetual state of
distraction and interruptions that is blocking our abilities to learn properly.
Thus, we are not building knowledge. Nicholas Carr wrote that the Internet is
making us “superficial thinkers,” in his book The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains. Our
humanity is at stake because we lack the ability to pay attention and control
our mind.
There is no doubt that the Internet offers a variety of benefits to anyone who is willing to effectively use it. There is more to it than social networking and watching silly videos. It undoubtedly offers a powerful educational source through the enormous amount of information available. It has been my electronic library. However, the fact remains that too much of anything is never good for you and the best thing we can do for our mind is to find time everyday to unplug, calm down
and focus on one thing at a time, especially that all the information will
still be there when we get back. The solution is to have more purpose in our
communication. We have to set ourselves the challenge of not having the
Internet in the palms of our hands all-day and everyday.
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