There are a number of things that I feel very strongly
about, from silly to super important. The goodness of coke. The magic of the
south. Our need for forgiveness. The joy of writing. The evil of man. The
beauty of kindness. The way it heals you to be hiking in nature. The widespread
need for justice. The importance of family. The love of Jesus. And also, the
invasiveness of technology on relationships and priorities.
I wrote a piece a while back called “My beef with
technology.” I wrote all about the various forms of technology, and their uses
by people around me, that were getting on my nerves. That was when I had a flip
phone. I had a beef with technology and I also did not have technology. I
literally never answered my phone and was well known among friends for being
very difficult to get a hold of. I hated phone calls in general. I was barely
texting, while everyone I knew had a smart phone. I got stopped by a guy one
day who laughed at my phone and said, “Do those things still exist?” When I got
texts from other people it was more annoying than anything because half their
message got cut off because of my memory space. I never, ever even conceived of
checking my phone for texts. It was a miracle when I noticed one was there or
if I got a call. I was very hands free with technology, just trying to stay
close enough for Jason to be able to get a hold of me, since that was important
to him.
I almost got a smart phone a couple of times. But each time
I didn’t understand what the point was, so we waited. In the meantime, little
flipper did me just fine. I had phonecalls and texting when I wanted them,
scribbled out my directions from home, checked my emails when I got him once a
day, and every once in a blue moon someone got a hold of me. The introvert’s perfect
life.
One day Jason finally got a new phone for work, so I reluctantly
got his hand me down. It bugged me at first because I went from having this
nice little tiny thing to what felt like a heavy miniature suitcase for my ear.
It felt like it would rip a hole in my back pocket or maybe swallow my face. My
dislike only lasted so long, because I finally realized what sort of
conveniences I had been missing. I think a lot of people sit down with their
smart phones like the day they get them and spend hours on them, adding
applications, getting to know all the in’s and out’s, and feel in general like
they’ve adopted a perfect child. For me, it’s like every few weeks I’d notice
something new and helpful. So at first I was just glad my texts weren’t cutting
off. Then like a month later I found the search button for the internet, which
was nice. Then I began to notice the little facebook tile spin when I had an
update, which was kind of cheery and all. It was quite a day when I realized I
could take notes on there and make folders with my little thoughts on different
things. So I grew to kind of like it, though no matter how I put my mind to it,
the maps still don’t make perfect sense to me and I still write them down
before I leave. Don’t you feel like you pass a street before it tells you to
turn? Probably just me.
I think I didn’t really want to admit I liked my new phone.
I wanted to just hate it. Like only
hate it. I still knew what I hated about devices in general, which made me not
want to leave any room for liking them. No love-hate. Just hate. That would
make it less confusing.
Admittedly, technology has been a blessing to the world in
many regards and there is much to like. With every invention, much struggle has
been alleviated from the backs of mankind, finally bringing about a certain
relief and breakthrough on everyday work and obligation. To disparage it as a
whole, despising its existance, would be foolishness and single minded in its
argument. It is what it is, and depends on how it is used. It has either
brought good or evil, beauty or pain, common grace or an open door to sin,
depending on what sort of heart has made it an instrument. It is a tool and it
is used by mankind for many purposes.
However, I feel discouraged that many are willing to
overlook or belittle the consequences of such an open swinging door of
technology in order to enjoy all of the benefits as an individual. Not to my
credit at all, only because God made me this way, I have a gift of keen social
awareness. This is a blessing in some regards and kind of a problem most other
times. I can’t overlook what’s going on all around me, for good or bad. I see
nonchalant glances. I see little reactions on kids’ faces. I see a small hand
held. I see a woman being admired. I see what look comes over someone’s face
when they are disappointed. I see that frozen hesitation before the tears come.
I see the enjoyment of inclusion. And the discomfort and figeting of exlusion.
Remember those activity pages in kids’ magazines that ask what’s wrong with this picture? That’s kind of my filter. If I need
a job one day I’ll apply to make those.
From personal experience and observation, I have noticed
that beyond the usefulness and benefits of technology, there has also come a
struggle for boundaries, decency, and respect. I have been accutely aware of a
prevalent lack of wisdom associated with the use of technology and an
underlying tyranny of the urgent, pulling humanity away from priorities and the
ability to have a contented present-ness where we are.
So I admit a personal struggle to notice the goodness, the
helpfulness, the advances of technology, because I can’t help but feel the
heavy weight of how it has come like a bulldozer through so many families and
relationships. From laptops to smart phones to video games to television shows,
I have experienced myself or witnessed on countless occasions many smaller
stories in life where technology has brought a moment of pain, distance, hurt,
rejection, or displaced priority. And these from loving family members, well
meaning people, without an intention to slight or injure. And I grieve for that
and all the worse, more ill meaning stories happening all around.
Children are being ignored, not seen behind yet another
dancing screen. Or else they themselves move from show to xbox to games on
their parents’ phones. Entire evenings of entire years are being wasted on
surfing mindless chatter while books dust. Youth are secretly enjoying
pornography while their parents are busy watching some of their own in a
different room. Stalking is now the hobby of the everyday housewife. Teenagers
get to know everything posted about someone before they have to find the
courage to meet someone in person. Marriages share a couch with dualing
laptops. Dinners are interrupted by little clips of your favorite songs and
distracting check-in’s under the table. And the waves of information have come
over our heads and are drowning us all, because we weren’t made to carry the
weight of the world and still have keen consciences. We read about a tsunami killing
hundreds and then click on a celebrity update and send a little hello message
to a friend on facebook. And with the lightspeed of updated information, truth
is questionable as being the fastest to get it out there has taken priority,
and apologies can be offered later for the slaughtering of plausability.
I came across a blogger a while back who shares my heart
exactly. Her blog is called Hands Free Mama and she has a passion for being a
wife and mother who is known for being present in her relationships and not torn
in different directions by whatever is tugging for her attention at the time.
She wants her children to remember her as a mom who was right there in the day
with them, never saying “hold on a sec” and showing no self control over her
use of technology, though it is so prevalent in our society. I “liked” her on
facebook and have kept up with some of her posts. I considered myself a kindred
spirit with her. With like minded encouragement, I was constantly bringing it
up with other moms, praying about it, and watching boundaries in my own home
with my screen time and priorities. It has become one of my social issues I am
really concerned about and extremely burdened for in my particular mini-culture
of stay at home moms who have a constant example day in and day out to the next
generation of future adults, who will also be facing their own temptations and
decision making one day very soon.
In the same breath that I write all of this, something in me
changed recently. With an increasing measure of laziness, curiosity, and
letting down of my guard, I have become a total hypocrite in an unrecognizable
way to the woman who just wrote the rest of this blog. I’m not sure how it
happened, but I know it was a slow progression and a constant dismissing of my
seemingly small decisions. In the last six months I have allowed myself to
completely slide into being what I hate.
I hate it when moms leave their laptops open and on all day in
the middle of life and I do that now. I hate it when people check their phones
everytime they get a new text and I do that now. I hate it when people talk to
their kids while they still are looking at their phones and I do that now. I
hate it when people use their down time in lines and waiting for school pick
ups on their phone instead of talking to their other child in the back seat and
I do that now. I hate it when moms use their kids’ quiet times or nap times to
just doze out on tv shows, and I do that now. I hate it when spouses sit in front
of the tv or beside each other on laptops, and I do that now. And I really,
really hate it when people get their cell phones out while driving or at stop
lights and I have totally been doing that now. I feel very strong hatred of the
exact things I am doing.
I seriously feel like two people writing this blog. I
totally agree with the me that wrote the last three pages and am super
disgusted with the last paragraph I just wrote. Yet, what I just wrote and hate
is what I do! That makes me a complete hypocrite, not living out what I say or
think. I expose my heart’s true cracks and lack of will, as I live in a way
inconsistent with my convictions and my true burdens for my family, my
community, and our culture.
And I didn’t see it coming. It’s not like you feel like you
can just stop either. It feels like a totally new lifestyle habit that will be
hard to stop doing and being. Once you avail yourself to being that “present”
to the demands of your phone and email and facebook and even knowing the very most
updated information on the news, it becomes difficult to step back into the
knowing of just your present life and not know what is continuing to happen in
the rest of your community or world. We have an insatiable desire to pry into
information and be updated continually and we feed it with our habits of
checking in. And each new message or email is just feeding that little desire
to be included. I don’t even have sounds or ringtones turned on because I hate
them, but I pick up my phone constantly at various times, looking for that
little number in the tile telling me I have something to check. And on really
bad days I am checking it as each individual message is coming in, and once in
between as well. I am on top of every email, every text, every facebook
comment. And to be totally honest, with all of this indulging of extra and more
information, my bedtime is later than ever, keeping me up past midnight most
nights and keeping me from waking up for my morning quiet times.
I am absolutely feeling mastered by my phone. And I am so
surprised this is where I am when I was so determined, so resistant, and
honestly so disgusted by the behavior I know currently possess. It amazes me
how I can think about the many times I looked over my piece of technology to interact
with my child in one day and be sicked out by that, and then repeat the
behavior the next day. I need humility that leads to repentance. My conviction
is currently only leading to a guilty sense of feeling bad, but it has not
fully culminated to laying this addicting habit down, repenting that I am
needing my devices more than is healthy for me or my relationships, and asking
for the Lord to show me how to surrender this to him in a continual way.
Going through this has definitely reminded me in a very
clear way that even when I feel strongly about something, I can betray myself.
I am capable of self-deception and choosing temptation over conviction. I am
not invincible in my determination, so the way I wave a flag about my opinions
on a matter should be done with a bent knee of humility. My character is flawed
and my actions are carried out by the state of my heart, which is in constant
need of refinement by the Holy Spirit.
I am going to slow down this week, create some temporary
boundaries for myself, and take some good, hard, long looks at the faces of my
children. And I am going to pray that my heart is refined, and renewed, and
purified, pulled away from my reckless spinning desires and slowed to an
intentional walk in the ways I feel true convictions to joyfully walk in. I
want to be free to live in love, prioritizing the people I feel true gratitude
for having in my life, getting the priveledge of displaying the kind of life I
hope my children get to live one day. I’m thankful for this jolting look at
what I believe set right beside what my behaviors have actually demonstrated so
that I can wake up and live an honest life in line with true convictions. And
the grace of God will free me from regret’s condemnation and give me a joyful
hope in starting again.