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SimSity's avatar

I really appreciate this thoughtful essay today.

The high school where I work has FINALLY adopted a cell-phone policy. It's pretty simple--kids just have to put their phones in pockets. It has been amazing to see 1) how readily kids are accepting this--they, too, want a break from the constant pressure from their phones, but the devices are simply too powerful to control on their own; 2) how quickly the classroom culture has changed. For the first time in years, I've had to deal with classes being too talkative! Kids are complaining less about having to work in groups; I see them doodling and writing in notebooks during class; they're even taking longer to do their work since they're not just rushing through it so they can go back to their phones.

I really do think that some day we'll look back at the first 15 years of smartphone usage as equivalent to when doctors condoned cigarettes. Obviously, smartphone technology can be an incredibly useful tool, but the idea that everything in life is enhanced by it, or that they *should* be on us at all times (or even that we *should* be reachable at all times) just hasn't borne out.

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Johanna's avatar

About a year ago, after a 10-year hiatus, I re-subscribed to the print version of The Atlantic Monthly. I had read it religiously, cover to cover, every month for much of my 20s and early 30s and it gave me a really nuanced view of the world and of politics, but it also exposed me to so much that I never would have chosen for myself - art, literature, music reviews, extremely niche dives into topics that were never part of my orbit.

I canceled my subscription when I started reading *exactly the thing I wanted to read* on Twitter (RIP) or other news sites and was able to perfectly cultivate my experience with being informed about the world. In a way that exactly aligned with my worldview, from people who reinforced my own biases and beliefs. And I lost SO much during that time. I lost my patience, I lost my ability to think critically, I lost my tolerance for anything that wasn't *the thing I wanted*.

With the death of Twitter (among many other things), resubscribing to a physical magazine and reading it cover to cover every month has changed my brain for the better in ways I didn't really think I had missed. Just being exposed to articles about ideas I had forgotten were important (or not) and immersing myself in them briefly has made me feel a lot calmer about my consumption of the news and media, and it makes me wonder what other areas of my life I can extend this simplicity and peace to.

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