A writing teacher should not assign prompts without attempting to write her/his own model responses, too. If I can't write passionately to a prompt I assign, then I cannot expect a student to tackle the task with any enthusiasm. Here is an essay I wrote in response to a thought-provoking cartoon that I assigned today to a 16-year-old student (as homework). The prompt is intended to evoke a personal opinion essay (four paragraphs) about the overuse of cell phones and the current American obsession with staying "connected." I purposely wrote with a plethora of specific details and figurative language to encourage him to choose similarly precise and creative words.
Cell Phone
Sabbaticals for Sanity
By Susan L. Lipson
A cartoon from The New Yorker depicts a woman reclining on a beach while
searching through her purse for her cell phone and saying to two fellow
beachgoers: “I’ll be on vacation until I find my cell phone.” The warmth of the
sand on her bare toes, and the hypnotic shushing of the ocean, will immediately
vanish once her fingers touch the cool screen of the smart phone, and her ears tune
in to the insistent beep of notifications. Although cell phones act like
stabilizing anchors by keeping us connected and reachable even as we continue
to make waves, they simultaneously restrain us from floating off to relax at sea,
away from responsibilities, in stress-free vacation mode. To truly enjoy a
vacation—uninterrupted by telephone calls from home or work, disconnected from emails
that demand responses or dictate tasks, unaware of social media campaigns and
calls for attention to a tiny screen—we must “dumb down” our smart phones and develop
a “vacation mode” (or at least a vacation mindset) that would restrict cell phone usage during
preprogrammed travel dates.
Ironically, we cannot fully
recharge ourselves while attached to fully computerized phones that are never
unplugged; we must unplug and power down in order to empower ourselves to
experience the temporary freedom known as “vacation.” Communication, while
essential to human existence, requires energy, sometimes from electronic
devices as well as from the humans who operate them. Conservation of that energy is
the purpose of a vacation—like a reset button on a continuously running computer.
If we tune out of business-world communications via electronic devices, and instead
tune in to face-to-face interpersonal communication or introspective communication
via meditation or quiet time, then we can truly experience the bliss of losing
ourselves in our thoughts, in new activities, and in the company of our fellow
vacationers.
The paranoia of powering off keeps
too many people from finding the peace they need for their own health. They
worry about missing “Something Important”—whatever that might be. Thus, this over-connectedness
may even be a new kind of anxiety disorder (not to mention an addiction). The
symptoms of this contagious disorder manifest themselves as cell phones left on
dinner tables between diners; as darting eyes that attempt to appear engaged
while checking for flashes and notification banners; as vibrating pockets and
purses that frequently evoke dashes to bathrooms or lobbies; as excessive
interest in Wi-Fi availability in selecting public places to meet with others;
and as avoidance of any communication that does not involve
typing. In the days when phones were only for calling people, we left our
computers in our offices, along with automatic “vacation responder” messages to
notify contacts that we would be incommunicative for a certain time
period. We traveled, back then, not with
Bluetooth devices in our ears, but with headphones to listen to our favorite
music. Today, however, our phones are pocket computers, enabling us to take
work and obligations with us wherever we roam, turning us into stressed-out
workaholics who even use “silent mode” to communicate stealthily in every
context.
The stress-related health risks
associated with over-connectedness point to a need for phones to offer to a new,
user-programmed “vacation mode." This self-regulated mode could be restricted to: 1) phone calls to designated
Vacation-Approved Favorites (family and close friends); 2) camera shots that
could automatically be stored in a folder titled “Vacation Photos”; 3) travel information
apps (for transportation, lodging, maps, restaurant and tourist site reviews);
and 4) music players. Time off can only
serve its rejuvenating purpose if we turn off, as much as possible, our
connections to the working world.
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