Wherever I look nowadays there’s a comment, a report, a Facebook posting
or filming denouncing how people seem to have forgotten to interact to others
more physically and therefore, emotionally. It is hard to look around and not
see that indeed. In fact, people really seem to dedicate more attention to
their smartphones than to the friends next to them.
However, is this behaviour a consequence of an abusive use of social
networking or this use has just made evident what was not so noticeable before?
Over 20 year ago when I moved myself to Europe I started working as a waiter.
Saturday’s mornings always caught my attention because I could see couples
simultaneously having their breakfast while they densely read a weekly paper
and curiously, I could not see or hear any kind of interaction between them for
all the time they spent in there. The same also happened in other days, with
other types of relationships, where books, crosswords, magazines and sometimes
even nothing looked like more interesting than talking to each other.
I believe that there is a powerful social construct selling out the
exaggerated notion that relationships are a constant exchanging between people.
A system from where people get to complement one another while within this
constant exchanging there’s mutual compensation, which ends up fulfilling each
individual. However, it also seems a bit claustrophobic to me. I can see all
the benefits that come from it though, but I can also point out enough material
serving as justifying argument or as accountability regarding personal agendas.
The point for me is: There’re as many people stuck in their smartphones
as there can be found in bars, discos, shopping centres, or public squares and
they all are interacting to others. Whoever likes a party just likes it, and
this kind of person would never prefer watching an event through a minuscule screen instead of going see it live! Whoever enjoys a nice face to face chat
will never hold much dependency on WhatsApp! However, let’s think about
the people that was never much popular, or those highly shy that used to go to
the movies by themselves just to go back home later to a book. Think about how
these people have never had the chance to say to anyone how they really feel.
Social networking brought life, ideas, possibilities, lessons, inspirations and
so much more to these people.
The thing is that we will find loads of narrow minded people out there,
pseudo intellectuals not able to see further than the obvious common views by
which they love to promote themselves. Of course that social network via
communications technology did impact our lives and of course there are pros and
cons. But there is such a fuss upon people that really don’t need anyone
looking out for them! The excessive use of social networking comes from its own
easy access and it is not an indicative of lesser life quality.
On the other hand for me, this phenomenon is just an extension of this
backward stimulus that inspires a constant looking back type of behaviour,
where people develop discourses comparing how childhood used to be in the 80’s
related to now. They cynically, sarcastically, and ironically insinuate that
the current knowledge that we have built up upon observation and research is
nothing more than pedantry. They love narrating how ‘normal’ these children
grew up to be despite of their childhood being devoid of all the current
supporting laws and health and safety normative as we know it.
We are around seven billion of people in the planet with a very long
history to tell, but for all that matters, we have a spatial lab navigating all
the way through Saturn and we also have landed another one on a moving comet,
which is enough evidence that what we have been building up can lead us
somewhere better. This insistent looking back behaviour is a huge anchor in
society life and it is also very disrespectful at our own evolving trajectory.
It is the same kind of principle underlying attitudes that cut off human
being’s freedom, that punishes differences, and that incarcerate those who dare
to question or show new directions.
As suggestion, try to think more deeply and with more reflection about
whatever you are about to share in your social network. Remember that
prejudice, ignorance, fundamentalism, and abusive behaviour are all ‘friends’
in their own social network and they are often connected and connect matters
that in a first glimpse they don’t seem to relate to each other.
I wish you all an excellent week of social interaction.
Eduardo Divério.
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