Although I reserve the right to be a
crotchety old woman when my time comes, I have often snorted with indignant
disgust when those of the older generation criticise the state of youth in
society today. It seems logical to me
that the older generations leave the legacy that the younger ones have to
survive within by whatever means available to them. Complaining that that young people don't
share traditional values is really just pointing out that the older ones didn't
help shape a society where these values were important enough to continue
with.
Selfishness, stupidity, violence
and ignorance are not qualities transmitted through genes. Nor do they creep in via tap water or the
air we breathe. These are ways that have
been taught to children who come into the world innocent and biologically
primed to fit into the culture in which they find themselves. That is the primary survival strategy nature
has gifted babies - to observe the subtleties of other people and re-create
perfectly what they see, even a sort of exaggerated version of their
observations. If children are off the
rails and worse than before, it is only because they are the reflection of what
they see.
Deep down, we know this. Maybe we can't always admit it, but somewhere
it registers that we are the masters of our own destruction. We know that if things all go pear shaped for the
entire human race, we've all had a role to play. I think modern obsessions with vampires and
zombies are a sort of way of dealing with this frightening knowledge. Film, television shows keep churning out
programs with slightly different takes on the un-dead.
The vampires, are blood thirsty
killers, clever and beautiful but dangerous and incapable of real human
feeling. Zombies, on the other hand, are
mindless. Slaves to insatiable hunger
which leaves the whole world desolate. Self
destructive as well as dangerous, the uninfected people pitted against them
strive to maintain some semblance of humanity, even though they can see it is
futile against the tide of un-dead millions.
What an apt metaphor summarising the current direction of the whole
human race. Things change so quickly,
and in a few short years the ways we live, communicate, eat, socialise
transform in unpredictable ways that reflect new technologies and modern
advances. These technological
developments seem amazing and helpful, but we are increasingly drawn away from
actual social interaction with the illusion of technology dependant social
interactions. Increasingly, within the therapy room, my colleagues and I deal with the aftermath of social media and the disconnected ways of being always connected. Fears over what others are thinking or doing are not just the kindling of our internal ruminations. We can easily check out if someone has just decided to not respond to our email or text. We know almost immediately if an ex has moved on. And bullies are bolder than I remember in my childhood, as they operate from the comfort and security of their computer screen. And the bullied are no longer safe once they shut the door behind them at home. Are we all becoming heart-less? Less humane and more selfish and destructive?
Our friendships exist in electronic
realms. Our lives contained in a
handheld device. We spend untold hours
staring at it, asking it questions, determining our next moves with it,
creating ourselves and reaching out to our loved ones, all while not actually
touching the world we imagine ourselves to be engaged in. The little screens
offer a seductive diversion and become a habit, to the point of creating a
zombie out of each of us. We don't look
as human, as we trudge along, eyes downward cast, drooling over whatever has
our attention for that brief moment. It sounds terrible but these mobile
devices are not actually evil. And they are such a trap in that we
unintentionally end up zombie-fied when our actual intention to be connect to
others.
![]() |
"Phone Wall," the campaign by Ogilvy & Mather China |
When I think of things in that way, I feels
helpless against the inevitable tide of the increasingly insular, disconnected
society we seem doomed to create for our children. But it also offers a wake up call from time
to time. For instance, when I catch
Ethan pretending a banana is a phone which he speaks into very a exasperated
and rushed manner. Or when Thom and I
catch ourselves staring blankly at our screens while he makes his dinosaurs and
hot wheels run up and down our legs.
It's a tragic sight and one that
I feel sincerely sorry about.
For better
or worse, we are here, at this point in history with all these electronic
gizmos. But I don't want to leave my
child the legacy of disconnected relationships and impersonal electronic communication. I don't want him to miss out on the little
human things like reading someone's feelings in their eyes and talking face to
face. I don't want to teach him to bury
his face into his phone rather than face what's right in front of him. So that
means we will have to be different.
Different than we have been and different than the rest of the
zombies.
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