Living
In The Age of Distraction -by Margaret Wheatley
COURTESY: http://www.dailygood.org/story/449/living-in-the-age-of-distraction-margaret-wheatley/
“Sit,
be still, and listen, because you're drunk and we're at the edge of the roof.
--Jalaluddin Rumi”
For years I assumed that the Titanic tragedy
was a result of human arrogance, the belief in the indestructibility of the
newest, largest, fastest, fanciest ship of all time. But actually
the Titanic went down because of distraction. Other ships had been
warning about the iceberg-filled waters for days, but the Titanic’s captain
changed course only slightly and did nothing to slow the ship’s speed. When the
radio operator received a call from a ship that was surrounded by ice—this was
less than an hour before the collision—he responded, “Shut up, shut up, I’m
busy.” By the time lookouts spotted the iceberg ahead, it was too late to slow
the Titanic’s momentum.
Although overused, the Titanic is a chillingly
accurate metaphor ... ...
... ... ...for our time. Distracted people don’t notice they are in
danger. Rumi said: “Sit down and be quiet. You are drunk and this is the edge
of the roof.”
The evidence is plentiful these days that distracted
people cause harm to themselves and to others. We read reports of fatal train
accidents caused by the engineer texting and of commercial flights crashing
because pilots were chatting. Pedestrians and drivers are killed because
they’re on the phone or texting. We need look no further than ourselves to
observe distraction. How long can you focus on any activity these days? How
many pages can you read before wandering off? How many other things are
you doing while you’re listening to a conference call? Have you stopped writing
emails that make multiple requests because you only get a reply to the first
one? Do you still take time for open-ended conversations with friends,
colleagues, or your children?
An Ecosystem of Interruption Technologies
In the 1930s, T.S. Eliot wrote, “We are distracted from
distraction by distraction.” It’s a perfect description of our present day. How
did we get here—to this life of incessant connection but total
distraction—where even if we recognize that we’re hamsters on a wheel, we can’t
get off?
The answer is that our lives, relationships, and politics
are being shaped by an ecosystem of interruption technologies. Between smartphones,
tablets, and personal computers, we have instant and constant access to each
other and to the Internet. Superficially, this seems to be a great benefit, but
in practice we can now be interrupted at any time, in any place, no matter what
we are doing.
Throughout history, technology interacts with its users
in predictable ways: it changes behaviors, thinking processes, social norms,
and even, as neuroplasticity studies show, our physical brain structure. It may
be hard to accept, but the truth is that the tools we create end up controlling
us.
I learned of the devouring, deterministic march of
technology from the work of French philosopher, educator, and political
activist Jacques Ellul. You may not have heard of him, but it was Ellul who
gave us the now-trusted concept “Think globally, act locally.”
Here is Ellul’s harsh clarity: Once a technology enters a
culture, it takes over. It feeds on itself, assisted by eager adoption and
demands for more of it. Social structures, such as values, behaviors, and
politics, can’t help but organize around the new technology’s values. The
predictable result is the loss of existing cultural traditions and the
emergence of a new culture.
Gutenberg’s printing press, because it put information
into the hands of everyday people, is credited with the rise of individualism,
literacy, complex language, private contemplation, the literary tradition, and
the advent of Protestantism. By 1500, just fifty years after its invention,
more than twelve million books were in print in Europe (and people were already
complaining that there were too many books).
Many of us would like to reject this deterministic
description of human disempowerment. But we can validate how technology
transforms culture by looking at what has become accepted behavior in the past
few years. Do you remember when people talking out loud on a street were
labeled crazy, when intense, emotional conversations were held in subdued
voices in private places? Do you remember having time to think with colleagues
and family to work out problems, rather than exchanging rapid-fire texts? When
you used to walk into a colleague’s office to ask a question rather than fire
off an email? When you enjoyed taking time for conversation rather than rushing
to get the information you need right now? How many times have you been
distracted as you’ve read this article?
This is evidence of how the ecosystem of interruption
technologies is reshaping culture. We might still value curiosity, contemplation,
privacy, conversation, and teamwork, but are these values visible in our
day-to-day behaviors? The contradiction between what we value and how we behave
doesn’t mean we’re hypocrites. It simply shows that technology has taken over,
as it always does.
Right now, you may want to call my attention to all the
wonderful benefits of the Internet—it’s a revolutionary technology that makes
you not only more efficient but also more effective. I agree with you. I
couldn’t do my work or write a book without search engines, e-books, and email
exchanges, and I couldn’t stay connected to my family when I’m traveling.
However, we have to focus beyond the content, as
beneficial as it is. Marshall McLuhan wrote that the content of a medium is
just “the juicy piece of meat carried by the burglar to distract the watch- dog
of the mind.” We have to notice how we are being affected by the process of texting,
calling, posting, linking, searching, and scanning.
More than just creating distraction, our growing
addiction to the Internet is impairing precious human capacities such as
memory, concentration, pattern recognition, meaning-making, and intimacy. We
are becoming more restless, more impatient, more demanding, and more insatiable,
even as we become more connected and creative. We are rapidly losing the
ability to think long about any- thing, even those issues we care about. We
flit, moving restlessly from one link to another. It may seem like we’re in the
process of discovery, but many studies now show that multimedia
environments—with links, photos, videos, bottom text crawls—don’t encourage
learning and retention, because so much information overloads our circuits.
Nicolas Carr, in his compelling book The Shallows:
What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains, describes us as minds consumed by the
medium. “The Net seizes our attention only to scatter it. We focus intensively
on the medium itself on the flickering screen, but we’re distracted by the
medium’s rapid-fire delivery of competing messages and stimuli.” He quotes
Seneca, the Roman philosopher from two thousand years ago: “To be everywhere is
to be nowhere.”
Self-Manufacturing People
The Internet, by design, gives individuals the capacity
to fragment information and use it how- ever they choose. Today, there are
hundreds of millions of personal filters operating at cyber speed, taking
others’ expressions out of context, selecting parts they like, and constructing
selves for public viewing. What’s being created is millions of individual
identities, brilliantly displayed. What’s being lost is a sense of collective
identity, of the shared meaning that transcends the individual and brings
coherence to a culture. We’re losing the capacity and will to enter into each
other’s perceptions, to be curious to see the world from another point of view.
Our insatiable appetites for self-creation and
self-expression have transformed us into twenty-first- century
hunter-gatherers. We’ve become addicted to where the next click might lead us,
so we keep hunting incessantly. Overwhelmed by inputs, caught in our
self-sealing cycles, we devolve into self-manufactured people driven apart by
rigid opinions and lonely for acceptance, into hungry ghosts grasping for the
next new thing to satisfy us.
I chose the word devolve very carefully.
The most dire consequence of this instant-access,
information-rich world is that it has changed the very nature and role of
information. In living systems, information is the source of change; Gregory
Bateson defined it as that which makes a difference. Information no longer
plays this mind-changing role. No matter how reputable the science, or how in-depth
and thorough the investigative reporting, no matter the photos and evidence, we
sort through the information with our well-formed personal filters. Information
doesn’t change our minds; we use any report or evidence merely to intensify our
assaults on the other’s opinions.
When we aren’t interested in disconfirming information,
when we fight to protect our own opinions rather than work together for a
reasonable decision, the world becomes unpredictable and random. It seems as if
there’s no order, but it’s we who are the source of the chaos.
When we don’t think and discern patterns, events seem to
come and go out of nowhere. We don’t prepare for natural disasters; we mock
leaders who take time to make decisions as “indecisive”; we refuse to read
well-developed analyses; we criticize complex legislation for its page length.
At work, we demand five-minute presentations and elevator speeches to “get”
whatever the issue is. If something complex requires more time to understand,
we’re too busy. Just like the radio operator on the Titanic.
The world, of course, is neither random nor chaotic. It’s
our lack of thinking that makes it appear so. Before many disasters, the
information is there that could have prevented a tragedy. After a disaster, I
wait to see how long it takes to reveal the information that was suppressed,
the voices of warning that were silenced. This is always the case. Before the
economic collapse, a few people saw the illusion for what it was (and were able
to profit from the meltdown). One year before Katrina, the federal government
had simulated just such a catastrophic hurricane, but officials failed to do
the prep work specified in their action plans.
We have made this world into an unpredictable, fearful
monster because we’ve refused to work with it intelligently. And the ultimate
sacrifice is the future. Thinking forward is impossible for those reacting
fearfully moment by moment. Tibetan cosmology includes a class of beings who
“hurl the future away from themselves,” as far from their awareness as
possible. Seems they saw us coming.
The Practice of Three Difficulties
The only antidote to this culture of interruption
technologies is for us to take back control of ourselves. We cannot stop the
proliferation of seductive technologies or the capacity-destroying dynamics of
distraction or the techno-speed of life. But we can change our own behavior. In
the eighth century, the Buddhist teacher Shantideva admonished, “The affairs of
the world are endless. They only end when we stop them.” Goodness knows what
was so distracting in the eighth century, but he speaks well for our time.
To restore good human capacities—thinking,
meaning-making, discerning—we need to develop discipline. We need to be mindful
of distraction, and disciplined enough to shut off the computer, put the phone
down, make time for casual conversations, sit patiently, and listen—all without
getting anxious that we’re wasting time, that we won’t get through our to-do
list, that we’re missing out on something. The practice described in the
Buddhist lojong (mind training) slogans as the “three difficulties” can restore
sanity and capacity to our daily lives: 1) You notice the behavior. 2) You try
some- thing different. 3) You commit to practicing that new behavior until it
becomes natural.
Deciding to practice nondistraction is quite difficult.
At least that’s my experience. We become aware of the frantic, anxious lives of
those around us. We see just how many distractions there are and how addictive
our behavior has become. Then we apply the antidote: we notice our distraction,
we commit to try new behaviors, and gradually we regain memory, thinking,
focus, meaning, relationships. And, hopefully, we avoid the iceberg looming
dead ahead.
2 comments:
Biggest distraction in todays world is Mobile phone...
............. which is no more a phone, but a DEVICE !!!!!!!!!!!!!
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