Unplugged: Deactivating My Brain
Technology Diet
No TV. No Facebook. No Texting. Can anyone imagine such a world?
This became reality for 26 students at the University of Central Florida. Last year their English professor, Mary Ann Murdoch, challenged her students to unplug and live a technology-free life for five days.
Only two of 26 students in Murdoch’s class were able to relinquish cell phones, iPods, portable CD players, text messaging, e-mail, computers, TVs, DVDs, and video games.
I crafted a similar technology-free experiment for myself. No texting. No web surfing. No social networks. No iPods, CD’s, TV, video games or personal e-mails. Just my phone for basic calls and my laptop for emergency school-related email and Microsoft Office programs. For one week.
Tech Diaries
Sunday Night 11:45pm –
The experiment was set to start at midnight. Before I unplugged from my comforting world of chargers and wires, I posted a disclaimer on all my social media profiles stating: Doing a social experiment for a class which involves me giving up most technology for a week. If you wanna talk to me, call me or stop by my place! Starts tonight at midnight! Bets on if I can do it?
My experiment warranted initial reactions of “Maybe I will send you a hand written letter bahahah”, “Good luck with that!” and “Well, guess I will talk to you in a week. L8r!” It seemed most of my friends thought my experiment was pointless.
“When I heard you were going a week without technology, I couldn’t believe it,” said Johns Hopkins University senior Kayla Culver. “I thought I could never do that.”
Monday
Slept in an extra two hours today. Wandered around my room not knowing what exactly I should be doing. Went to class and came back for another nap. Sooooo bored. Went to bed early. Perhaps I could get used to this
!
“It is so funny that is your definition of boredom,” said Dian Schaffhauser, a business and technology writer for Campus Technology. “You had all this extra time to do stuff but you didn’t see value in that. Generation Y views technology as a necessity rather than an accessory; the baseline for what we need to get along has changed.”
Tuesday
Went into the bookstore to get a work study application for the spring semester. Asked the woman behind the counter for an application and she responded with “You can access our application online.” I politely asked if they had any in-store copies, she stared at me before bringing the supervisor over to solve this problem.
I repeated my question and the supervisor repeated I could access the information on line. I started to explain my experiment to them, but exasperated, I conceded defeat and walked out empty handed.
Wednesday
Had an interesting experience at the NYU library today. I figured since I can’t use the internet to look up information, the library will help me out. Dewey Decimal System, here I come! Unfortunately, I needed technology there more than I imagined.
In order to look up any books, I had to use the internet access tied to the NYU network database: Bobcat. I don’t know why I expected to use a card catalog (haven’t heard that world in a while).
Realizing I would need some assistance looking up information, I wandered over to a librarian and asked her if she could help me find a book. She looked at me and said, “You know, you can look it up online.”
No, duh. She looked at me like I was stupid. I informed her I couldn’t use the computer as per a class assignment. She huffed and puffed before agreeing to help me find the book.
Thursday
Hi, my name is Kelly and I have a problem. I’m addicted to technology. Having headaches and feeling nauseous today. Feel pretty heavy. I think I’m due for some Technology Rehab.
Friday
No one called to tell me that my Ultimate Frisbee scrimmage at Columbia University was cancelled. Rode all the way up there to meet a dark stadium and an empty field. Wasted $4.50 and two hours!
Saturday
Stepped outside today and slid my iPod headphones in my ears. Walked four blocks before realizing I ever put them in. That’s muscle memory for you! Reading and napping all day. Bo-ring!
Sunday
By far the easiest day of the whole experiment. Just counting the hours. Excited to feast on all the technology meals I missed this week!
First post experiment food? Facebook.
Importance of Technology to a Generation
Sure, I shed a few electronic pounds on my technology diet. I read two decent books, reconnected with an old acquaintance and became a self-declared solitaire champion. But truthfully, I wasted more time without technology than I ever did with it. Without my iPod buds in my ears, I felt lost. Without my thumbs stomping across the letters on my cell phone, I felt lost. And without seeing the Lady Gaga video the second it premiered on MTV, I felt lost. So instead of trying to find a path out of this “lost-ness”, I slept it away.
