The Limitless Bradley Cooper Syndrome #NaBloPoMo
You know that movie āLimitlessā starring Bradley Cooper and Robert DeNiro where this guy named Eddie Morra (played by Cooper) is able to write books, clean apartments, eat, dress and do pretty much anything faster than ever all because of a little pill? Well, this aināt no Bradley Cooper movie and there is a reason why it takes special medication to perform a multitude of tasks in a flash that such a character would not be able to do otherwise.
The reason is because we are not supposed to be doing one dozen tasks at once in the first place. Olympians donāt win medals that way, Athletes donāt win championship rings that way and people donāt Crush It that way. So, how in the world does someone like me who used to take my time drawing pictures that would not be complete for days as a kid and developing screenplays for months as an adult suddenly have the shortest attention span ever?
On any given day, at any given time, Iām usually working on a computer with somewhere between two and five tabs at the minimum open in an Internet browser. At the same time that I bounce back and forth between blogging, reading news stories and checking on jobs, Iām listening to music on my iPod, checking for text messages on my cell phone and probably trying to finish watching the latest DVD movie rental on my television screen.
Still, the mere possibility of realizing Iāve become one of the millions of multi-tasking people with short attention spans that are getting even shorter as a result of new technology and the Internet didnāt dawn on me until I read one of the latest blog posts over at Terrible Analogies that referenced a Vitalic video featuring man's best friend.
It was a hot and humid Tuesday night in the city on July 19th when I clicked on a link that took me on over to YouTube so I could watch this doggie video. As the first few scenes started to play, this 3:05 video barely made it past the one-minute mark before I found myself opening a new browser to complete another task as the video continues. There is something wrong with this picture. In a day and age where we have many resources and tools that offer great convenience, giving us time to do more, why is it that I still canāt seem to even make it to the end of a short online video with a running time of three minutes and five seconds?
Tiffany Shlain was right......we are all connected! However, there can often be too much of a connection with technology that becomes so normal that we tend to miss out on a lot without missing out on a lot, if that makes any sense to those reading this post. It is important to unplug once and a while because real , personal interactions and moments of peace and quiet are just as crucial to healthy living as being connected to a virtual world.
If we donāt slow down, weāll have hell to pay sooner than later. Iām going to try and use these conveniences for good and in moderation like Eddie Morra because it would suck to end up like his friend, um....whatās his name? The guy who plays Detective Jake on CSI: Miami....you all know who Iām talking about. If you donāt know, please watch the movie or at least check out some old episodes of āCSI: Miami,ā around the time when Horatio was dating Ericās sister......then youāll know who Iām talking about.
Until next time.....
Consider the importance of focusing on what you are doing at the moment and giving that activity 100% (or at least 80% if youāre eating or having a telephone conversation) of your attention before moving on to a new task.
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Reader Comments (3)
So true. Right on. Turn it OFF, so you can turn ON!
If I don't have constant input from multiple sources then I feel deprived, as if I'm missing out on something. I'm sure this is a side-effect from our current over-stimulated environment, with 24 hour cable television, music, tv on demand, iPods, delivery pizza, cell phones and the internet...but I'll be darned if I'm not an addict to the information age.
I'm actually glad that I enjoy camping in the desert, and can occasionally unplug and unwind in the middle of nowhere. I guess we all have to find a balance somehow.
I wonder how the younger generation will cope with the glut of instant information and the technology that provides it over the next twenty years?
I try to focus on what I am doing and am fairly successful. As I type this the tv is on, laundry buzzer getting ready to go off and there are only 4 browsers open :) Unplugging can be liberating and I need to do it more often.