The No Phone Afternoon

The No Phone Afternoon April 1, 2011

I walked out one afternoon earlier this week without my mobile phone. I planned to spend the afternoon in reading and sermon prep, and left the office to a place where I could work uninterrupted.

About five minutes away, I realized I didn’t have my phone.  I thought about turning around and getting it, but decided to go “cold turkey” instead.

I had my laptop, since I would be writing, and where I’m working has free WiFi, so emailed my staff to let them know that I didn’t have it.

I feel interestingly free.  No phone. No text messages.  No reminders of appointments or scheduled tasks. Only the interruptions I choose, not the ones imposed on me by it.

I know we are all in information overload. We know too much.  Information about wars, rumors or wars, hurricanes, earthquakes, nuclear meltdowns, and political upheavals taking place around the world land in our readers and tweets and updates within seconds. We know instantly when family members are ill, the moments babies are born and have constant updates with current activities and thoughts.

It’s too much. It’s just too much. I think it is killing us, alienating us, and separating ourselves from our souls, from our rhythms, and from God.

And, of course, I will post this on my blog in just moment, where it will be picked up by the RSS utility within a second, and within a few moments, will be picked up by Twitter and pushed through to Facebook.

We’ve really got to do something about this!

 


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