


More importantly, you’ll live long enough to enjoy it. I entreat all smartphone zombies: please, please limit your cell phone use! You’ll have a better quality of life. Will it have to take some type of epic catastrophe or tragedy to make us stop? I hope not. According to the study, the most common driving distractions are texting, browsing social media and email – each averaging approximately 135 seconds in duration. The negatives outweigh the positives (including the convenience).Ī 2017 study from Cambridge Mobile Telematics (CMT) found that in 52% of all car accidents, drivers had been on their phones – 29% were driving over 56 miles per hour. If we keep it up, it will not end well for us. This type of behavior is counter-intuitive. Studies have shown that excessive use of these mobile devices may cause psychological damage as it relates to the development of interpersonal relationships. Communicate – face-to-face – with those around you. I know this may sound old-fashioned, but how about leaving our phones in our pockets or purses while enjoying dinner. But just like most good parents should limit the amount of TV and video games that their children should engage in, so should we adults minimize our unhealthy obsession with our smartphones. So, what’s the solution? Granted, we do need our phones to communicate. Even more alarming, some of us do this while driving.Īnd, in my opinion, it’s ridiculous. At restaurants, our eyes involuntarily stray to our phones – multiple times – while in the company of friends and loved ones. We walk around, with our eyes glued to our smartphones, rather than enjoying our surroundings.

We’ve become addicted to our phones and tablets. More perplexing than that, who on earth could convince them otherwise?” – Alex Morritt, Impromptu Scribe (Image via ) “Casting a curious gaze down on planet Earth, extra-terrestrial beings could well be forgiven for assuming that we humans are programmed in every move we make, by a palm-sized, oblong, slab of glass.
