the iPrison

Once, we were at a restaurant enjoying our lunch, when I started hearing sound that wasn't part of the restaurant's music. It sounded like a live TV show with laughing and clapping.

I looked over and saw a mother and daughter eating lunch together. Only, they weren't really eating lunch together.

The daughter had her earphones on and was watching a Korean drama on her iPhone while eating.

The mother did not have earphones, but that did not keep her from watching her Korean talk show while eating her lunch — with the volume up high enough that we could hear.

(Cell-phone etiquette tip #1: No one around you wants to listen to what you're listening to. That also goes with those who have laptops in public places, like coffee shops. If you forget your earphones, do the right and polite thing — just wait until you get home to watch that video or listen to that audio clip. Oh. Tip #1.5 — also, in a public area, don't put your conversation on speaker phone. No one else is interested in your conversation about what you need to pick up at the grocery store. I guara-darn-tee it.)

It was such an odd sight. Mother and daughter eating together, but neither engaging one another. Why even eat lunch together? Or watch the same show…?

But it's a common sight, right? People walking around with their faces buried in screens (oh. Cell-phone etiquette tip #2: Don't walk and text. Seriously. It's a bit dangerous. Just youtube “walking and texting” and you'll see how it can be hazardous. Improv Everywhere even made a video about this epidemic:

I mean, it seems like we give someone about 2 minutes (at best) to intrigue us, or back to our phones we go.

Technology is supposed to make our lives easier. But instead, many of us find ourselves prisoners to the screens that dominate our lives.

At the end of the day, who's controlling who?

 

Thou Shall Not Covet

Image representing Apple as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

I got an email from Shane Raynor (please go read his blog and check out Ministry Matters, as well) playfully asking me about the (a bit disappointing?) iPhone announcement and if I had plan on getting one.
I can’t.
I have T-Mobile.
For another good year. And T-Mobile, I read, isn’t getting the iPhone any time soon, which doesn’t make sense, if they’re merging with AT&T soon.

Anyway, I currently have a myTouch 4g from T-Mobile.
When I first got it. I loved it.
I thought, since I have an iMac, a MacBook, an iPad, and an iPod… I’d figure, I can forgo the iPhone.

I was content with my decision.
And content with the phone. It had what I needed: texting, email, and gps. (I get lost easily. Even with the GPS).

Content, that is until one day, my wife came home with the white iPhone 4 (when the white ones were still new).
She had an iPhone 3 from her work place, but it’s glass got cracked, and since she was due for an upgrade, she got the white iPhone.

You have to understand that my wife is technologically challenged. She doesn’t even know what to do with an iPhone. She told me, “All I want it do is just make phone calls.”
“What!?” I cried. “Just phone calls?!?”
“I don’t care if it’s 4g, 3g whatever g. I need to make phone calls and receive phone calls.”

Ugh.

I set everything up for her, her email accounts, some games, some music…
And then all of a sudden, my myTouch seemed clunky, old and lame. Oh. And ugly.

I wanted to find a way out of my contract and get me an iPhone. Or at least an upgrade of a phone that was barely 6 months old.
It drove me crazy.
My wife, flaunting the iPhone and taunting me. “Oh, Joe. I don’t know what to do. Can you help me with this?” Of course, she wasn’t taunting, but that’s what it felt like.

It took me a good week to realize how awful I was being.
What in the world am I thinking?
I have a perfectly capable android phone.
I don’t need an iPhone.
And it’s truly, truly, truly sinful the way I was thinking.

I felt a bit embarrassed that I was falling into the trap of the-newer-the-better syndrome.

I’m okay now.
I’ve come to peace with my phone.
I really don’t need an iPhone. And to solidify the claim, I haven’t stepped foot into an apple store for about a while now. Okay, that’s a lie. A new Apple store opened in my neighbor. I HAD to go visit. But I walked away before I felt the urge to sinfully splurge.

An iPhone isn’t going to improve my life.
At the end of the day, it’s just a gadget. Something that I can live without.

I came across something interesting recently.
A Rabbi said that the 10th commandment, “Thou shall not covet” is less of a commandment, and more of a reward.
He said that if you followed the first 9 commandments faithfully, you would not have any reason to covet, and therefore, live a life of non-coveting and a life of devotion to God.

I like that.
I wonder if I’ll ever come to a point where I won’t be coveting for the next new thing in the wizardly world of gadgetry.