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Social Media By Mark Hatmaker

“Let another’s wounds be your warning.” (Njal’s Saga, c.37)

How wise is it to quest for or resurrect lost abilities/skills while allowing present skills to atrophy?

In the pursuit of excellence, we often overweight positive or how-to advice, i.e., via positiva, as opposed to looking just as hard for negative lessons, or how-not-to advice, i.e., via negativa.

Both roads, the Positive and Negative, have much to offer, but we are usually biased towards the “how to” road while failing to realize, often you can move faster down the positive road, and with fewer set-backs if we remove as many speed-bumps and hurdles as possible.

It is for this very reason the Viking wisdom from Njal’s Saga should be held at the fore:

“Let another’s wounds be your warning.”

With that out of the way, if you have a mind to, stick with me for an anecdote (a true one, but a single example does not a fact make), more than a little science from a learned man, and a speculation on cognitive canaries in coalmines.

First, the Anecdote

I have a friend, a good man. I will describe him as he was a single handful of years ago. Smart, funny, quick-witted, attentive conversationalist, and not without a good deal of personal charm.

Flash-forward to now. The same man has provided me with perhaps one to two brief interesting conversations in the past two years. There is a marked humor-deficit, his attention during conversation is 180 degrees opposite from half-a-decade ago, and there are more than a few unfortunate less-than-polite bordering on unkind stories that could be told. (And I won’t tell them.)

Now, what happened? Did he suffer some Phineas Gage “rail spike through the head” personality changing injury?

Did he discover the touted benefits of prescribed or un-prescribed pharmaceuticals?

No. Now, I’m merely making a guess here, I point to the smartphone in his hand. It never leaves the hand or fails to be unsheathed from its easy-access holster for more than 5-minutes at a time.

Let me jump ahead in thought with you.

Perhaps Mark is an old man grumbling, and perhaps the fault lies with me. It may be that I am no longer a good conversationalist myself and am putting the burden of my boringness on another.

Could be.

Perhaps the person in question has developed a refined sense of humor that has left my discernment in the dust.

Possibly.

Let’s turn this discussion over to someone whose conversational prowess is not in question. Dr. Marcel Kinsbourne, pediatric neurologist, neuroscientist, professor of psychology, and co-author (with Paula J. Kaplan) of Children’s Learning and Attention Problems.

Dr. Kinsbourne, offers that our deepening absorption with non-face-to-face communication (yeah, that whole social media thing that you might be reading this on) is having unintended consequences. He worries for our children.

Why?

Let’s Turn the Floor Over to Him

“The sharing of information is the least of what people do when they speak with each other. Far more, speech is a rehearsal of what the listener already knows or has no interest in knowing (technically, phatic speech). Yet people all over the world seek out phatic conversation for its own sake, and research has shown that after a chat, however vacuous, the participants not only feel better but also feel better about each other.”

If true, why might this be the case?

Back to the Doc

“Protracted face-to-face interaction is one of the few human behaviors not seen even in rudiment among other animal species. Its evolutionary advantage is as a mechanism for bonding—parent with child, partners with each other. The entrainment into amicable conversation implements the bonding: eye contact, attention to facial expression (smile? smile fading?), and an automatic entrainment of body-rhythms, a matching of speech-intonation, unconscious mimicry of each other’s postures and gestures, all well-documented, which is underwritten by an outpouring of oxytocin.


Vigilant anticipation of the other’s body-language and continual adjustments of one’s own demeanor in response make for an outcome of a higher order, aptly called “intersubjectivity” or “extended-mind.” Minds previously preoccupied with their own concerns defer to the other’s topic of interest, so as to arrive at a more shared and unified perspective on the object of attention or the topic of debate. Indeed, the harmony goes beyond the concrete and the conceptual. It ranges into the emotions; insistent bleak ruminations diffuse and scatter as the mind mingles with the mind of an intimate or congenial companion.”

Are we getting that? Face-to-face conversation, even so called “small talk” may have large implications for the well-being of the self, the ability to understand and/or read others. Last and certainly not least, the ability to empathize, sympathize, understand, and daresay, invoke compassion.

If you recognize yourself, or anyone around you as a bit distant because of persistent social media/phone-interaction, the above tells us that this may not be a mere “bad habit” or breach of etiquette. It tells us that we may be training ourselves to no longer connect intimately, to no longer discern the human around us with true accuracy, to no longer be truly interesting to others, and ultimately give up more than a bit of our own happiness along the way.

If we push this to a Warrior’s perspective, if we can’t read the people in front of us every day, just how well will we read deceptive intent in the Predators of the world?

Dr. Kinsbourne’s main concern is what this lack of phatic experience is doing and will do to children who are currently being raised in this “hands-off,” “It’s OK, to tune-out and live eyes on-on-the-screen” generation.

If we see adults around us already succumbing to this deadening of human-interactive ability, might it be a bit worrisome if we begin this at an earlier phase before these bonding and human-reading abilities fully develop?

If we accept that GPS hinders day-to-day navigational ability as studies and the FAA declare, swiping to “look it up” altering the ingraining and degradation of wisdom (borne out by much cognitive research) are we allowing a deeper more natively human ability to atrophy as well?

Let’s Give the Good Doctor the Final Word

“I fear that weakening, if not completely relinquishing, the compelling attraction inherent in entraining both physically and mentally with others will leave people alone even as their tally of “friends’ increases. I also fear that the flight from closeness to “individualism” will foster ever more vehement and destructive untrammeled self-expression, as the hobgoblins emerge from the shadows into the spotlight of the Internet and into explosive mayhem in the real world.”

I lied, I’ll take the last word. There may be a lot of destructive predictive power in that last bit from the Good Doctor. But, even if we don’t slippery-slope the case for real human-interaction, we must at least ask ourselves, are we truly alive and interacting with humanity if we choose to “interact” via small rectangular objects versus the flesh and blood at arm’s length?

We learn to be good, or at least cooperative, by interacting with others. We learn to feel good by interacting with others. Conversely, we may train away from being good, by not interacting with others.

Whether sitting around campfires, dinner tables, sitting on parked cars in the long extended “time to go home” conversations that stretch on for another half hour, humans are learning to be social via face-to-face interaction.

LOL will never match or beat a hearty real laugh with a friend, but many of us are all too eager to make that trade and seem willing to deny children the ability to even have that experience to decide for themselves if it is a trade worth making.

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19 thoughts on “Social Media By Mark Hatmaker”

  1. Sosial media can change some people and make them bitter and angery at the way social media is not all bad just some of the individuls
    And then some become angery and bitter about part ot the people on social media .

  2. Well thought out Article I share in your perspective. Human connection is an art form,which is literly losing out to the electronic world of Sufi. Distance is not the friend of humanity.

  3. Excellent points made . Certainly
    ” Food For Thought “. What does the Future hold ? Thanks.

  4. My 62 year old sister in law has withdrawn from contact with her family to the point of being cross with her elderly mother for interrupting her screen time. Mostly she forwards trite videos and cute bromides I delete without opening. Her doctor commented about this addiction and syndrome damaging her brain mass. It is very corrosive to family relationships. We are apprehensive that she will abandon her house and family to pursue yet another bad life decision. Some online person in another country.

  5. Unfortunate that the very people needing to read this will never do so. How can we make them aware of the negative trends technology is creating?

  6. I agree 100%. My daughter constantly complains that her son, my grandson, doesn’t listen or respect her. Thing is she is always on that damn phone. It really does affect the bond that infants have with their parents. I get down on his level and talk calmly to him, face to face. If he is misbehaving, I ask him if he is upset and what is making him upset. They may be young, but they long for face to face interaction.

  7. How true this article is. Saddest part is those that don’t communicate with other and prefer to text or pay with their phones lose the ability to communicate and talk properly. It’s the same as “googling ” instead of reading and researching with or minds we lose some of the ability to think and reason. Or using the calculator instead of the mind. Technology is good to a certain degree but it shouldn’t be a first to go to thing. If it is than you’ll be in serious trouble if shtf situation or a disaster happens.

  8. I used to be on FB all the time,It was OK until you add a friend and then you get all of their friends, or people you don’t even know (or even care to know.
    (My last post on FB was on 10/14/2014) I had to ask a Co- worker when That was. To me FB is the “Social Vomitorium” of the world. Better times now that I deleted it off my phone. Human interaction is always better and far more fullfilling. Heck when I was a kid, we played outside from “dawn to dusk”. Face to face communication is where it’s at, Not in some little gadget.

  9. In Australia, we call on ‘mates’ to interact with us – as Crocodile Dundee said: “Who needs a psychiatrist if you have mates to talk to.”
    But I agree that the art of conversation, especially among the younger generation, is becoming something of a lost skill. It’s not their fault in many ways, social media, in all its mediocrity, is a large factor in reducing this skill and as a result, our intimacy with each other suffers.
    The point is well made by Dr. Kinsbourne, that the so-called friendship engendered by the gathering of ‘Likes’ and ‘Follows’ and ‘Friends’ by cell phones and other media is merely a way of collecting imaginary people around them to give their lives some meaning. The more ‘friends’ you have, the more popular you seem to be. Alas, the opposite is often true.
    Yet, that is the trend of modern communication, and its demise seems a long way off – if at all possible. Are we doomed to electronic interaction that alienates us from real contact? Or will we realise that in the future, a healthy mixture of the two may be the solution?
    Only time will tell.

  10. Mr Hatmaker, the range of topics you bring to your articles, speaks volumes about you. Do you write any philosophical article/books?

    Fight the good fight!

  11. people to people ecology is its own social strength against social engineering and colonialism…

  12. How bloody true! A gaggle of millenials sitting around not talking is becoming an all-too-common sight.

  13. Very true. It’s a wake up call when instead of your grandchild asking if he can watch t.v., or watch the same movie over and over again, you suddenly realize that for the last 3mins., while his parents were talking, that little 3 year old has been tugging on mommy’s sleeve asking to play a game on her phone. In the next minute, the child has phone in hand and is quietly playing a game that will keep him/her enthralled for over an hour. Here is where the training begins as to where the buttons are, and what they do. No-one stops to notice the lack of interaction between themselves and the child. Thus confirms;
    individualism” will foster ever more vehement and destructive untrammeled self-expression, as the hobgoblins emerge from the shadows into the spotlight of the Internet and into explosive mayhem in the real world.”

    I will take the hugs and tantrums over the “individualism”. It is NOT worth the trade.

  14. I understand what you are saying exactly! Or should I say that “I smell what you’re stepping in”, and have the exact same thoughts on this particular subject!!! I am an extremely introverted individual, as well as testing out on the MBTI. personality type test as an INTJ. .I also have an IQ. of between 146 and 150 on the standardized tests. I still need close personal relationships, and would much rather speak with a person face to face or; actually use my Smartphone to make a phone call! I believe it is having many negative effects on people of all ages. There is much truth in the statement,that most things are okay in moderation in my opinion, but anything that becomes fanaticism, or obsessive is unhealthy. Heck even if a person were to drink to much water it would kill them! I also believe that there are certain things that you and I both gained through our activities that we shared with our parents, such as card games, board games, eating meals together, chores, and outdoor activities, as well as experiencing our natural world!!! Take Care,
    Your Friend,
    Kevin Krueger

  15. I can definitely see this, and this is one reason I gave up the cell phone. People on these devices are so distracted, I often get a false reply to a yes or no question.