Online and Offline
Often these days, more often than at any other point in my life as an aware adult, I find myself asking if I need to be looking at a screen. This means the phone, the laptop, even the desktop computer that I have designed to be as easy to turn on when I need it and off when–most of the time–I don’t. It’s not that I think I have a specific problem with the virtual world. If I compare myself to a lot others I know, I probably spend less time there. I have a set of responsibilies that keeps me anchored elsewhere, in things more tangible, for a lot of the day. My biggest problem at the moment is that my work requires a screen. There we operate under the presumption that pretty much anything worth knowing can be stored, displayed and worked on within the screen-based view.
But what is the problem with screens? What counts as a screen? Do I write “screen” when, really, I mean anything connected to a computer? Maybe.
Lately, I speculate that I acquired some unspoken, early-in-life faith that what I see displayed1 is a reproduction of the thing itself. This faith might account for how I could spend so many years looking at things on my monitor and not feel a dread about the unreality of it all. Sure, my eyes might get tired and strained, the rest of my body might start to fidget. But there wasn’t anything inherent to the screen itself that repelled me. How ever much I might dislike (in theory) the glowing two-dimensional representations I look at each day, I am still comfortable with them. I am trying to get less comfortable. Or it’s not a matter of will. I just am getting less comfortable and I am trying to figure out the reasons.
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Looking south of Roosevelt and west of Clark, at the “