Saturday 7 December 2013

MOBILES ARE HUMANS TOO!


Humans started to prefer to be alone,
Their best friends became their mobile phone.

A buzzing, ringing mobile device,
No human face could ever suffice.
Texting, calling, internet too,
Used in all locations, even the loo!
Obsessed, addicted, attached at the ear
Losing our device creates ultimate fear.
Until one day we all become cyborgs,
Only identifiable at the morgues.
 Changing our identity, becoming a part of you,
Or are our mobile devices, humans too?




I wrote this poem to describe our relationship with mobile devices as they are taking over our lives and forming who we are. If you think about it, mobiles are becoming a part of us, attached to our hands or ears wherever we turn. Which leads me to think that mobile devices are actually human too as we have allowed them to consume us and become an important factor of our lifestyles. In support of this theory, Ingrid Richardson (2007) believes that mobile devices have become an extra body part for human beings blurring the lines of what is human and what is not. In other words, becoming cyborgs. 




This is a prediction of what will happen to the human race in the future. Quite scary isn't it? To think that we might look like this in the future due to our over-usage of mobile devices. According to Amber Case (2010), we are all already cyborgs!! 

My research has led me to an interesting link regarding humans who have integrated technology into themselves to better their lives. Check it out if you get  a chance! 7 Real Life Human Cyborgs









Are you dependent on your phone?

Are you afraid to lose your phone? 

Do you feel lost without it? 

If you said yes to these questions you may be suffering from nomophobia. Nomophobia is the fear of being out of mobile phone contact (SecurEnvoy, 2008). Do not worry, as you fall into the category for the majority of humans who feel exactly the same! Research has shown that 9 out of 10 people under thirty feel anxious when they are without their phones (PTI, 2013). 


Dr Mario Lehenbauer-Baum (2013) states that 
If checking and rechecking your phone comes as naturally to you as breathing, or if you feel anxious or restless any time your phone is not on or near you, you may have a technology addiction”.

For me personally, I could live without my mobile phone. We have done it in the past and we could do it again. However society has evolved into technologically advanced beings who thrive on having information at their fingertips in the space of a second. Check out this Infographic regarding mobile phone usage. This gives you an idea of just how obsessed we all are with our mobile devices.

Some experts would say that we are addicted and reliant on our mobile phones to the point where we have become unacceptably and socially rude and have begun phubbing. Phubbing is the act of snubbing someone in a social setting by looking at your mobile phone instead of paying attention. I have most certainly been a victim of this but I do admit I am also a guilty party for this act and have phubbed others I have been with. Think about it have you phubbed or been phubbed? 




Signing out for now. See you next week! KM




References
Case, A 2010, Amber Case: We Are All Cyborgs Now, TED.com, January 2010, viewed 1st December 2013, <http://www.ted.com/talks/amber_case_we_are_all_cyborgs_now.html>


Global mobile statistics, 2013, Mobile apps, app stores, pricing and failure rates <http://mobithinking.com/mobile-marketing-tools/latest-mobile-stats/e#appusers>

Lehenbauer-Baum, M 2013, I am a nomophobic! Viewed 5th December 2013 <http://www.drlehenbauer.com/2013/08/i-am-a-nomophobic-nomophobia/>

Merz, T 2013, ‘Nomophobia’ affects majority of UK, viewed 5th December 2013 <http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/10267574/Nomophobia-affects-majority-of-UK.html>

PTI 2013, Nine out of 10 suffering from 'nomophobia', fear of having no mobile phone, viewed 5th December 2013 <http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-06-02/telecom/39690242_1_mobile-phone-cisco-five-people>

Richardson, I 2007, 'Pocket technospaces: the bodily incorporation of mobile media', in Goggin, G 2008, Mobile phone culture, Routledge, London, pp.66–75.

4 comments:

  1. It funny to think that mobile devices were originally created to connect people to people. They sold themselves on the premise that they could connect you to your long distance friends, or connect you to your family even when your not home. Now it seems that mobile phones do nothing but isolate you from having real physical connections with people. We are losing ourselves in our devices.

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    1. Hi Laura,

      Thanks for your comment.

      I agree with you completely. I wish we could kind of strip back to simpler things. I know mobile devices were created for connecting to one another and for convenience but I do miss the old days where kids would play in the street instead of being on their mobiles or having mobiles at the age of 10! Thats just crazy.
      I feel like even though we are all connected, we are quite alone and now more than ever we want to belong but feel like something is missing

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  2. Your poem is fantastic Kristy.
    I'd never head of being phubbed before. Wonder when that term will make the Oxford concise dictionary?
    Brigitte

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    Replies
    1. Thanks Brigitte :)
      Yeah I had never heard of it until recently. The other day in the car my sister said you are phubbing me right now and I said how do you know about phubbing and she laughed and said she read my blog!

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