“Oh my God, this will be the best Facebook status ever.
Better than Mandy’s from two days ago!”
I almost choked on the bagel I was eating.
I looked over and the entire time everyone was singing Happy
Birthday, the girl never looked up once from her phone: Status updated. Comment
received. Another one. Like first comment. Respond to first comment. Like
second comment. Respond to second comment. OMG. LOL.
Smoke seemed to be coming from the pink smartphone that was
center of her universe. In the meantime (believe it or not) real, actual,
authentic life--the waitstaff singing Happy Birthday-was happening outside of
Facebook world. The girl was oblivious to it.
Facebookathon 2011 continued even when the song ended. She finally looked up about
30 seconds later and proudly announced to her father the number of likes and
comments she received.
I set my glass down and just stared at the wall in front of
me. Who are we? What have we become? Sadly though, this was nothing new. It’s
the same as the mom who watches her son take his first steps through her iPhone
and has it posted almost instantaneously or the one million pictures we have
all seen of every type of alcoholic beverage, in every bar surrounded by twenty
drunk people posing for said pictures again and again and again. Sure, pictures
are fun and great times should be recorded with technology, but look around
right after the picture is taken and count how many people are posting it to
their Facebook pages.
But wait…what is occurring again during the immediate
Facebook fixation?
Oh, yeah…Life. The present moment. Here. Now.Conversation.
Interaction. The baby’s 3rd, 4th and 5th
steps. All missed while we are posting.
Another great example is a story my friend told me about a
date he had with a girl who was constantly texting. (We all know this person.
She is the one who has the fake-interested nod, says “Oh yeah, I know” too many
times and has the ridiculous courtesy laugh that takes the place of her
actually listening because her incoming text is really top priority.) After
several frustrating conversation attempts, and the fact that he was pretty
hungry and the waiter was standing at the table, he finally got out his phone
and texted her:
“Are you ready to order dinner?”
His phone beeped almost immediately: “Whenever you are.”
True story. Yeah, really.
So, these are extreme examples, but do serve to illustrate my
point well.However, before I go on, I definitely want to assert that I:
Am certainly not judging anyone
Do not have it all figured out
Am not saying that we should never use Facebook
again. It has definite uses and benefits
Am not bringing up anything new here. You can
all relate
I am just really saddened with the superficiality of
conversation I experience on a daily basis characterized by broad formalities
and quick responses that are never truly heard or cared about. Much is empty,
meaningless chatter that just fills up time followed by inability to remember
the conversation, lack of eye contact and numerous glances at the iPhone. At
some point, the conversation falls silent because they have no idea how to
respond due to the fact they haven’t a clue what I just said. And so, the cycle
of disconnect continues…
Where did we start becoming so disconnected? Have we lost
the ability to reconnect? To feel the sting of sadness or the euphoria of love
and happiness? Are we really so busy? Do we have so many emails and Facebook
messages to answer that many get short, uncaring, businesslike replies? Life
doesn’t exist in the news, on Facebook or Twitter. A text message is not the
same as a person’s voice. An emoticon is not the same as a smile or a laugh. It
cannot convey compassion or tenderness. An exclamation point is not the same as
human excitement or elation.
Life is here. Now. This moment. Staring you in the face. What
matters? REALLY matters? People? Friendships? Conversations that cut deeply or
just touch broadly on silly shit like current events/new products that we will
forget about in a few hours? Can we slow down and live with authenticity? Reach
out and put some meaning into our conversations? Increase our awareness of the
present, real moment that is occurring? Hell, maybe even LIVE in the moment?
Technology is useful, ever-evolving and sometimes truly
amazing. It is not the culprit. We have a choice of how much, when and where
social media fits into our lives. I am a bit guilty of “social media overuse”
lately and have been allowing myself to be part of the very cycle that breaks
my heart and leaves me feeling empty. I am tired of feeling like an epic social
failure when I reach down and try to connect with someone and get only broad formality
in return. I can’t count the number of times I walk away from completely benign
conversations just shaking my head in disbelief. No, not every human
interaction needs to be profound and earth-shattering. But can you listen and fully
engage in the light and fun conversations without concern for your phone or feeling
the need to do something, be somewhere or “one-up” the story? Tell me something from
your heart. Look me in the eyes. What makes you come alive? What brings you to
your knees? What do you dream of doing someday?
Behind this laptop is
a human heart. Just like yours. And I a value human connection far more than an
internet connection.
Super well thought out and written! Exactly what I think.
ReplyDeleteGreat Read.
Thanks for taking the time to respond. I have been thinking about this for a long time and finally figured out the words to go with what I was feeling. Glad to know others relate.I guess I too am a "social flunkie." And love it!
ReplyDeleteWhere is the 'like' button?
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I come from a generation that pre-dated facebook. It scares me to think that there are children out there who can't remember a time before it existed. There area series of ads running in Aus for a mobile phone carrier where people relate their social networking interactions using that carriers phones. It is just nauseating - almost like the little fat people on flying beds in the movie Wall-E.
We all fall victim to the mundane at some point, the trick is recognizing you have become a zombie and doing something about it..... perhaps by doing 'epic sh!t"
Well said Jill. I battle with the problem that 95% of the comments my blog generates are posted on FB and not on my site. (I post a link on FB, ppl click on it, go to my site, then leave and go back to FB to post a comment. Seriously!!!) I hate FB for all the reasons you mentioned and more but without it my blog wouldn't see any traffic. It's the classic "Catch 22" I face.
ReplyDeleteWhat was once my personal FB account is now a access point for everyone else to my blog. pi11wizard said it well with his closing sentence.
Yep, Scatman. I completely relate to every word you are saying on the catch 22.
ReplyDeletepi11wizard...brilliantly worded, love your insight and wit!
http://inoveryourhead.net/5-effective-ways-to-use-twitter-to-ahhh-fuck-it/
ReplyDeleteThis is great too. This guy calls it how it is.