Creative Writing: Put Your Phone Down

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Put Your Phone Down The delicious smells of fresh Italian foods waft through the air as we look over our menus, glancing around us at the surrounding tables to see what others have ordered. I can’t help but notice everyone around us is on their phones, isn’t the point of going out to eat with friends or family to spend time with those you are eating with? When did it become a technology fest, I wonder, as my husband and I are sitting sipping our iced tea. One table, the son and daughter are completely ignoring their mom to play on their phones. Their mom sits there, staring at her uneaten bowl of soup, while her kids are enticed by their phones. The table next to them, a mother is taking different angled shots of her plate once …show more content…

Only when I went to work with my dad did I get to practice my typing skills with my mystery Australian friend. A few years later, we got a computer at my moms house. I don’t really know it’s purpose except I would play Math Blaster and Wheel of Fortune when I was done with my homework. The screen again was three colors that I can remember but again, this was a long, long time ago. I grew up around computers obviously, did I like them? Yes and no. It was a love hate relationship. In school, we had Mavis Beacon and that funny turtle program where you had to put coordinates in and the turtle would move and draw squarish pictures on the mac in computer class. It was not to exciting, it was school work. In sixth grade we were given the choice between choir and computers. Although I was very shy and the mere thought of singing in front of strangers, completely freaked me out, I chose choir. Frankly, at the time, my thoughts were that computers were just something we typed our essays on, there was no real use for them in “real life”. Boy was I wrong. In an age where everything is done on computers if we choose do, and many of us do. We can keep track of what we eat, our workout schedules, our meal plans, our daily lives recorded …show more content…

“…rather than isolating people, technology made them more connected” says Hampton, a graduate student that Oppenheimer wrote about in his article “Technology is Not Driving Us Apart After All”. Do you believe this? It’s hard for me to not think that technology is driving us apart as you can go just about anywhere and see people constantly glued to their phones. I understand our phones are just a small part of technology these days, but most of us don’t see everyone at home. How they are using technology on their homes, my guess is that what ever one does in public, they are more than comfortable doing in the privacy of their own homes. But that same thinking can quickly jump to the other side of what my initial thoughts lead me to. In a time when we are not being together in the moment, so to speak, we are constantly connected to so many things. At the touch of a button we can get information on google, directions to where we are going, phone numbers to places we want to visit. We can call anyone from anywhere, as long as there’s cell phone service. Our vehicles come

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