Posted on 08/25/2013 2:26:44 PM PDT by rhema
Cell phones today in America are of course endemic, if not epidemic. On one of the thoroughfares in the youthful neighborhood in which I live, I can sometimes walk an entire block without passing anyone not on or gazing down at or thumb-pumping his or her cell phone. Everyone has seen three or four people sitting at a restaurant table, each one of them on a cell phone. Or a young couple who should be looking longingly into each others eyes looking instead into their cell phones. Just yesterday a homeless man, in front of the Whole Foods in our neighborhood, his cup extended for change in one hand, was talking loudly into the cell phone held in his other hand. Contemporary America might have a homelessness but certainly not a phonelessness problem.
The homeless mans cell phone was not a smartphone, but a flip phone, rather, I am a touch nervous to confess, like my own. My nervousness derives from my being so out of date as still to be toting around a flip, or what I have taken to calling a dumb, phone. Taking out a flip phone in some circles is tantamount to carrying an ear trumpetits almost quaint.
Only two people have my cell phone number, and weeks go by in which I never use my dumb phone. Still, I dont often leave the house without it. I carry it around in case some strange emergency should occur in which I would need a phone: I get a flat tire in a distant part of town, I fall and injure myself, I lose my wallet. The one thing I dont have to worry about is thugs mugging me in order to steal my phone, at least not when they notice it isnt a smartphone.
I bought my first cell phone roughly 20 years ago. I bought it for my wife, who was traveling frequently between Chicago and South Bend, Indiana, where her aged and ill mother was living. The point of having the cell phone was security. If her car broke down on the Indiana Toll Road, she could use the phone to call for help. The car never did break down, but we kept the cell phone, on which I paid a monthly fee of $36, or roughly $400 a year. Then someone told me that I need pay only $25 a quarter if I went into a nearby AT&T shop and refilled my phone every three months, at $25 a shot. At $100 a year, I acquired a second dumb phoneone for me, one for my wife. But the bargain isnt what is at stake.
The truth is that I am wary of having a smartphone. I already feel sufficiently enslaved by computers and digital culture. I can no longer write at more than a few paragraphs length except on my computer. (Solzhenitsyn wrote a good portion of his Gulag books in the smallest possible hand on toilet paper.) I must check my email 20 times a day, including first thing in the morning. I do not myself tweet, but I read the tweets of a few friends and also their Facebook pages. I spend roughly 40 minutes early in the day getting my (mostly unsatisfactory) news online. My computer pings and I rush over to learn the Wall Street Journal has discovered another hedge-fund guy guilty of insider trading, or three bombs have gone off in downtown Islamabad, news that could have waited. Digital life, with its promise of keeping one up to the moment, is very jumpy.
So why, then, do I need to carry a computer around with me, for smartphones have of course become portable computers. Do I require Google in my pocket, a permanent aid to memory, so I can check something as important as who pitched the fifth game of the 1945 World Series? Do I really need apps that will give me stock-market quotations, or let me play video games, or provide Baroque string quartets while I am in the bathroom? I have no need for these artificial distractions.
The mind, the rabbis tell us, is a great wanderer. In its wanderings it often comes upon memories of dear but now dead friends, interesting connections between dissimilar notions, random observations, ideas for stories and essays. No app exists to organize the wandering mind, thank goodness.
Early in the twentieth century, Degas was dining at the home of his friend the painter Jean-Louis Forain, a man who prided himself on keeping up with his time and who therefore had one of the early telephones installed in his house in Paris. In the middle of dinner, the phone rang, and Forain leapt from the table to answer it. Ah, said Degas, the telephone. Now I understand. It rings, you jump.
Think Ill stay with my dumb phone.
Younger people have figured this out. They don't call that much. They text. You look at texts when you're not busy and reply.
Should be on Western Rifle Shooters in the morning, and on FR a bit later.
Excellent line. I have a dumb phone, too.
I was met with outright hostility in a bar when others learned I don’t have a cellphone (not just on me, PERIOD).
Gooba gabba. One of us. One of us. No wonder Obama is a twice elected president with no public dissent from the masses.
I’ve got a dumb flip phone homeless model, the number of which I don’t remember, and when I was asked today to send a brief text message and couldn’t refuse, it took me 25 minutes to figure it out. Pressing 9 for a ‘W’, I was getting an ‘X’. WTF?!
The phones in my household are pretty dumb, too: they make calls and take passable pictures. Because our friends sometimes text us, we added 300 texts a month for $5 to our inexpensive plan. I think we maybe use 20 in a "busy" month.
I suspect most people don't reach the end of their lives thinking, "If I'd only watched more TV and spent more time on my computer and smartphone. . . "
Jonathan Richman - You can have a cell phone that’s okay but not me
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4w2V9O-pCBQ
When I’m on the beach
I’m on the beach
No you can’t call me there
And when I’m on a walk
I’m on a walk
No you can’t call me there
And when it’s breakfast time
It’s breakfast time
What more can I say?
A city nearby has added curbside parking stickers. $8 a day or something like $25 a year. You HAVE to pay by cellphone. WTF?
And these Democrats think that it is “too big a burden” to require photo IDs to vote?
How did he know eartrumpet has a flip phone?
I was once able to start a fire after several days rain using only matches, paper and the dry insides of some logs I’d split.
I could probably do it again with a little practice.
Need to learn to do it with flint/steel (or the modern equivalent thereof), though.
Lucky guess?
About 12 years ago I got a cell phone for work. The boss stopped by the worksite one day and asked me why I never answered my phone. I told him the only reason I had that phone was so I could ignore his calls as much as he ignored mine.
Me too.
Thanks to the cellphones you can no longer write country (and otherwise) songs about having/not having a dime to call your sweetheart/no longer sweetheart from the honky tonk where you’re drinking yourself to death! Thanks Al Gore (He invented cellphones, didn’t he?)!
“Here’s a quarter - call someone who cares!”
I felt old when that was a hit, because a phone call used to be a dime!
Good old Atomic Rooster. I wish I still had all my old vinyl.
My co-workers spend a bunch of their time staring into smart-phone screens. They show me the funny jokes, etc, that are “mom-appropriate.” But I wonder how much we as a society are missing and leaving un-done because we are wastimg time with cell phones.
And a lesser extent, computers ... how long have I been on here?
You don’t really need air conditioning or or a car either but they sure are handy.
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