Instant Gratification Essay

766 Words2 Pages

Instant gratification is defined as fulfilling satisfactions gained by impulsive behaviors, or in laymen’s terms, choosing now over tomorrow. In today’s high pace society each person desires results, and they want them quickly because of smart phones. Smart phones grant the ability to stay connected, communicate, and search for information instantly. The convenience and instantaneous nature of smart phones has created a society that is impatient. By being able to connect and communicate at all times, it is now expected from each other. Cell phones are in possession throughout nearly the entire day so people can become upset if someone doesn’t respond or react in a timely manner. This habit is shifting to other aspects of daily life because …show more content…

Although multitasking is common now, society doesn’t multitask as well as they envision. In fact, high volume, intense, busy careers require the skill of multitasking for you to succeed. All of which takes a certain ability to concentrate through many distractions while completing multiple tasks simultaneously. This skill is simply what someone needs to possess to survive today in certain industries. Not only do jobs require that people multitask, technology barrages people with information to make them unconsciously multitask or fight to maintain ones focus. Smart phones constantly call for a war between oneself to be productive or feed into the desire to be distracted by the phone. The convenience of a smart phone is tough to fight off because it is always there, just waiting to be tapped into. Multi tasking does not efficiently get two separate tasks done. It can hinder the performance and possible make each task take longer. The constant need to multi task is forcing it self into interactions between each other, too. People are now struggling to engage in full on …show more content…

People use technology and multitasking between digital and real worlds to fulfill that need. Many young people today are more than likely to whip out their cell phones to text or find an app that is more interesting to keep themselves entertained when there is a break in conversation. The collective attention span has dropped massively, and Restak provides evidence to support this. One example is when young adults or teenagers are playing video games. While playing a game such as a first person shooter, whoever is not playing would typically have his face glued to his phone almost the entire time. Until an exciting kill blared out of the television, then he will pop his head up and take a quick peek. Easy access to mobile technology increases the constant dependency on technology because simply cellphones are always there. When compared generations prior to this modern technology era, the current effects of technology are visible. The parents of this generation simply use technology in moderation and to supplement their lives and interactions, rather than rely on technology because technology wasn’t as unavoidable or convenient in their time as it is today. Too many parents today stick a tablet in front of their child before and during dinner to keep the child distracted. This is going to cause the technology dependency at very young ages because these children don’t know any better! Parents’ of this

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