I was speaking with
someone the other day and was somewhat surprised to learn that...he
did not own a cell phone! The astonished look on my face prompted
him to add that he did not have a Facebook page either. The
Facebook account I can somewhat understand. I only “joined”
Facebook several months ago myself and admittedly lived quite
comfortable without it. But I thought everyone, or nearly everyone
had a cell phone. I mean, come on, some parents even deprive their
children of healthy meals or positive family time in order to pay for
a cell phone.
And if someone doesn't
have a cell phone, what do they do while driving in the car to occupy
their time? Does it mean both hands on the wheel?
My question to
him.”What would you do if he needed to get in touch with someone in
a hurry or worse, someone needed to get in touch with him to check up
on the time for dinner or ask the age old question...'whatcha doin'
?”
As I walked to the car,
checking my cell phone for messages, I thought about the discussion I
had just had. Was his life simpler, less complicated than most other
people? What was he 'missing out' on? But then I thought, maybe I was
the one 'missing out'.
For just one day, what
would happen if we all turned off our cell phones? What would we
miss? What did we miss before cell phones became so much a part of
our lives or did we just plan our lives more efficiently back in the pre-cell
days?
Talk about going 'cold
turkey'! No cell phones! The nation's teenagers would suffer a mild
meltdown of some sort. And so would many of adults also.
For just one day, what
would happen if you didn't check our Facebook page or better yet,
didn't post anything for that day. Your Facebook friends might think
you had been abducted by aliens and taken to a far away planet. If
that were the case, think about what you could write about the next
day!
To go one step further,
for just one day what would you miss if you didn't check you email.
For me? I would miss the Kohl's and LL Bean sales notices or the
notice from my the doctor reminding me of my upcoming colonoscopy.
(It's not actually the doctor sending me the email but it's nice to
know she cares.)
What would happen if
for just one day we didn't drive our cars. What about a
'country-wide shut down' when no one drove...all taking place on the
same day. Think about how much fresher the air might be or the gas
though would be saved. Ah yes, then the price would go up the next
day. But, need to get somewhere? Either walk or plan ahead. I see a
number of people riding bikes these days. That might work. Remember,
there was a time when each household only had one car and most
families survived. These day, many have two cars and..oh yes, maybe
an additional truck to pull the four wheeler or snow sleds.
For just one day, what
would happen if you turned off the television or 'talk radio' shows
and picked up a book. No, Kindles don't count. It has to be a book,
something you hold in you hand and gently turn the pages. Nothing
electronic on this day.
Without the television
or radio you might miss hearing about events happening in a far off
place or miss out on one of our Governor's profoundly political
insights (I call them LePage's Rages). So what! If it is going to
happen, it is going to happen and we will learn about it soon enough.
But by the end of the day, think about how much more peaceful you
might feel?
Just for one day what
would happen if we hung up the cell phone, turned off the computer,
parked the car in the driveway and took a nice, quiet walk with a
friend or family member, played catch with the dog or spent time
looking through an old family photograph album or looked at items
tucked away in the 'junk drawer'. (That's a reference to a previous
column I wrote.)
With respect, I admire
those who can put aside the cell phones and the texting, are not
signing into Facebook to see what others are doing (do I really want
to know?) or checking email every few minutes. What was suppose to
make our lives a bit easier and less complicated has turned into
something controlling and often obsessive.
Not ready to take the
leap just yet? Maybe just for one day we at least think about not
answering that cell phone call. Let it go to voice mail. Who ever is calling, you can get
back to them later!