I hope you're not one of them―perpetually romancing your
smart phone, turning catatonic once the gadget slips from your grasp.
Some say it's a social malady, just like alcohol addiction;
so is it possible that some enterprising folks may already have rehab centers
for the intexticated?
"Intexicated" refers to someone who is distracted
by texting or composing an email on a handheld device while walking or driving,
thus unaware of his surroundings.
So serious is this epidemic that the Automotive Club (AAA)
of Southern California has, in its
recently launched road safety campaign, lumped drinking and texting as the
major causes of fatal road accidents; "with nine people killed and 1,000
injured daily in America," notes the advert.
I wonder if the message's target audience even noticed, or
if they even care―because serious and fatal car crashes attributed to cellphone
use continue to daily hog the headlines in these parts.
Intextication is not just a road safety concern. It is a
serious problem pervading mostly young people and a lot of social media-enamored
adults.
Experts report that since the advent of the smart phone,
hordes of youngsters are sleeping less, hardly socializing and are depression
and suicide-prone.
This teacher has seen this trend first-hand among students.
With less sleep, they find it hard to concentrate and do their course works.
It's as if knowledge enters their heads in a flash, then exits as soon as it’s been
discussed, reported or written about. Ask about the topic the week after and it
seems to have been erased from their memory.
Because if they fiddle with hordes of texts, sites and apps day
and night, all they really catch are soundbites or snapshots of information―too flimsy to even make sense of.
That's poor substitute for disciplined thinking or analysis.
A flooded mind is like a river cluttered with debris―murky and unable to freely flow.
No wonder youngsters or the intexticated lack focus, get into accidents easily,
struggle with process and systematic thinking, or fail to even carry decent
conversations.
image credit: http://collegetidbits.com |
Sometimes I think some of my students have already turned
into zombies. Imagine them sleep-deprived, mind foggy and numbed because of their
incessant net surfing. Yes, they raise their hands at roll call.
But come discussion time, they simply turn ghost-like―unresponsive,
or simply asleep, but with eyes wide open. Some make you feel they're focused on
what's on the table while their fingers are busy with their cellphones under
their desks.
Technology is a blessing, but abused can be a vexation, and
therefore deadly.
Intextication, like intoxication, has its consequences. Ask
recovering alcoholics. The road back is bumpy, but not impossible, by God's
grace.
That's why this warning: Luke 21:34 34 “Be careful, or your
hearts will be weighed down with carousing, drunkenness and the anxieties of
life…"
Ephesians 5:18 "Do not get drunk on wine, which leads
to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit."
Be intexticated instead with the Word, which leads to life,
wisdom and sobriety.