This seems kind of draconian, but it surely works. Enforced unplugging.
via Fast Company
This seems kind of draconian, but it surely works. Enforced unplugging.
via Fast Company
via @susancain and Yahoo
This seems to make sense on so many levels. I'd love to hear stories about the effects it's having; I'd like to think that as this becomes more widely known the Congressional use could become a model for the rest of us. Calls to mind Krista Tippet's Civil Conversations project and the National Day of Unplugging.
"Labor is a craft, but perfect rest is an art," as Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote, of the Sabbath.
— Pico Iyer (@PicoIyer) February 21, 2014
That bit about the older aunt stings. When I first sent a holiday message, after a stroke, there was a great deal of self-satisfaction in the act. I've been seeing the issue as a matter of widening my digital footprint. This shows there's more involved.There’s something distinctly unfriendly in requiring people to participate in your chosen broadcast forum in order to participate in your life, rather than reaching out to them individually. It’s like that older aunt who sends out a form letter once a year to tell you all about that family vacation and their kids’ successful lives and the new car they bought, with the only personal touch being the signature at the end: she isn’t interested in you or your path through life, she’s just proudly announcing her own satisfaction at you. Which is great – I’m glad that people are happy and want to share that – but that’s not a friendship.
via Explore
https://twitter.com/FastCoExist/status/435747544019529728/photo/1
This seems like a way to make unplugging more social.