As many of you know, I have been a concerned critic on the
topic of technology and its affect on our ability to relate to each other and
on consciousness in general. But
today, in honor of the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, I feel moved to express
my gratitude to technology and specifically, the modern device known as the
cell phone—for one unexpected reason, which I will lay out with a story.
Today, as I approached the park where my 9-year-old
daughter’s fourth grade class was holding a running race, I spotted a huge
group of parents huddled together, anxiously awaiting the appearance of our
children. Enter my friend, the
cell phone—and my gratitude.
Suddenly, my silent device found its way to my ear and that was that…
problem solved. For this purpose,
I bow in gratitude to technology, to save me from the ritualistic and
repetitive exchange of information we call small talk.
I speak to people for a living so I feel somewhat qualified
to make the following claim… Some
people love small talk but in fact, many hate it. Regardless of where we fall on the spectrum however, there
is an enormous pressure to engage in it.
If you follow people after a small talk conversation and ask them if
they had wanted to be in the exchange that just occurred, often (amazingly),
both people will report wishing they could have avoided it. This is the fascinating part. Neither person wants to be doing it,
and yet, like well-behaved citizens…off we go, chatting away, our mouths
moving, making noise, as we wish we could just be quiet. This brings me to the
next question. Why do we feel we have to? Why
do I (ironically) hold up a cell phone to keep me in a chat-free zone? What are we afraid of in the
silence? Meeting ourselves? Losing our minds? Death?
Technology creates noise in the mind. Our devices keep us jacked up,
distracted, protected from
ourselves. Talking, checking,
searching, playing—technology makes sure there is always something for the mind
to do. We never have to face our difficultly with being still or being with
ourselves. Furthermore, technology
strengthens our belief that the answer to our discomfort, distraction and
inability to be where we are, is somewhere to be found in the distraction
itself, somewhere in the infinite morass of the information technology
offers. While we claim to be
learning all sorts of new and important things, mostly we are learning how to
keep the internal chatter going, and stave off our ever-increasing fear of
silence. To steal from the movie “Spinal Tap,” technology has turned the mind’s
volume up to 11 when the dial is only set to reach 10.
We are terrified of silence. And yet, tragically, what we
fear is precisely what we crave.
In our deepest hearts, quiet—relief from the inner and outer noise—is
what we long for. In truth, we do
not want more ways to make our mind screech, we want to be able to stop the
screeching and be where we are—within ourselves.
In this culture, to be quiet while in company is viewed as a
rejection of the other. In order
to acknowledge being together, we believe there must be words, to document the
experience. And yet, when we crave
silence, it rarely has anything to do with the other. Rather, we simply want to be in company with
ourselves—nourished by the silence that sits under all the noise. Our desire to refrain from small talk
is about longing to turn down the volume of life, and stop trying to fill up
every moment with contents and chatter.
The longing for silence is a longing to land where we are—to come home
to the stillness that is our essence.
Deep down, we know what we need and it is not more noise.
So in honor of Thanksgiving, I bow to my cell phone. Not for
the reasons we usually think of—not for the “more” that technology offers, but
for the “less” that it paradoxically can provide. I bow to the power that technology holds to keep us in the
silence that we so crave—and so desperately need to stay well. I express my deep thanks to the
opportunity that a dead cell phone against an ear can offer… the chance to
connect with my own being—to reside, blessedly, in the silence that is the
essence of our deepest nourishment and true well-being.
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