| > Maybe all the time I spend looking for better ways to do things is keeping me from, well, doing things. Eureka! People are complicating their lives just to decomplicate later. It's a vicious cycle designed to keep the market flowing. Needs are created in real time, we don't even know why we need certain things any more. We live under the anxiety created by the excess of excess. With 99% of the so called "life hacks", we're just trying to eliminate a problem that we created by another "life hack". Oh a nice trick to keep the iPhone doing X? Cool! Why did I need X in the first place again??? I don't remember. And the iPhone...why did I buy it? I just play a silly game and use the contacts list most of the time. There is a: 99% chance you don't need your email available 24x7 99% chance you don't need a new car 99% chance you don't need a cell phone turned on 24x7 99% chance that 99% of the shit ton of information you gather daily will be thrown out of your brain in just a few weeks 99% chance you don't need a stupid GPS guiding what you do, where you drive 99.99% chance you don't really need a new iPad, iThis, iThat, HTC that, whatever 99% chance you don't need the extra U$ 1000 on your sallary 99% chance you didn't need to be tweeting or checking your email while there was a nice person sitting next to you while you waited at the airport 99% chance you don't need to be all you can be better richer faster more This is why the world is turning into a bunch of control freaky, unhappy, lonely, greedy and unhealthy bunch of individuals. I discovered this one day. I said fuck it and went for a walk at the park. Since then, I've done the same thing daily and I don't miss the other 1567 things I used to do on the Internet instead of having a silly walk at the park. |
Most current work environments consist of 8 hour long streams of interruptions. You could say that dealing with the interruptions is the actual work now, and the work that you were supposed to do has been relegated to being a nuisance.
Of course, this results in the birth of the entire GTD and "life hacking" fads, because people foolishly believe that this mess is somehow manageable.
What you describe above could be seen as withdrawal symptoms from persistent hyper-stimulation and hyper-responsiveness. People are so used to constant external stimuli that require attention and feedback at the workplace, that they need to recreate these situations at home.
I think that in this regard, television is an old medium, because it is content with you just sitting on your lazy ass.