Deliberate Rest

A blog about getting more done by working less

Month: August 2012 (page 1 of 2)

Shiny happy people going offline

Jenna Wortham follows up her piece on unplugging with a post on a response she found interesting: Nathan Jurgenson’s argument “against fetishizing the offline and becoming obsessed — and boasting about — our micro-reprieves from the screen.”

Jurgenson is making two important arguments. First (as Wortham summarizes), is that claim that

despite what we may think… despite our best efforts, we are never fully disconnected. That paradigm simply doesn’t exist anymore; the impact of technology is far too deep. We’ve gazed into the abyss long enough that its begun to gaze back.

Second, as Jurgenson argues in a recent essay on “the IRL fetish,” we treat going offline as some kind of exotic treat, a sign of how plugged-in we are:

Many of us, indeed, have always been quite happy to occasionally log off and appreciate stretches of boredom or ponder printed books — even though books themselves were regarded as a deleterious distraction as they became more prevalent. But our immense self-satisfaction in disconnection is new. How proud of ourselves we are for fighting against the long reach of mobile and social technologies! One of our new hobbies is patting ourselves on the back by demonstrating how much we don’t go on Facebook. People boast about not having a profile. We have started to congratulate ourselves for keeping our phones in our pockets and fetishizing the offline as something more real to be nostalgic for. While the offline is said to be increasingly difficult to access, it is simultaneously easily obtained — if, of course, you are the “right” type of person.

Here’s what wrong with this argument.

First, it conflates the technological meanings of “online” and “offline,” and the social or enacted meanings of the terms. When “the IRL fetish” talks about online, it means both a collection of behaviors and a set of technologies; Wortham, in contrast, sees online as something you do, not something that is layered into the folds of reality. Jurgenson’s essay starts from the premise that online is simply a hardware category, an inescapable feature of the physical (or hybrid physical/digital) world. Claiming that you’re “offline” is as laughable as claiming that you’ve escaped gravity by jumping on a trampoline.

Wortham, and everyone else who experiments with digital sabbaths, treats online and offline as activities, as verbs rather than nouns, as psychological states, and as things they can choose. For her, being offline is something you do. Online is the pressure to keep with, to pay attention to the connection, to tweet and Like; offline is relief from all those pressures.

Second, “the IRL fetish” argument turns “logic”– the logic of the machine, of ideologies, of unthinking everyday practices– into inevitability. Like the prison-house of language, we’re now so wrapped up in the logic of the network that we can’t see how it affects us (not without superhuman effort, anyway).

In contrast, for Wortham and digital sabbatarians, going offline is an assertion of your ability– despite the best efforts of companies to produce addictive, dopamine squirt-generating experiences that keep you hooked to your devices and allow them to turn your attention into a commodity– to direct the contents of your consciousness, as William James put it. It’s a declaration that, all efforts to convince us otherwise, we still have choices and agency in our high-tech world. And it’s a recognition of the pleasures that come from rediscovering and using that choice.

Finally, the claim that going offline is merely a fetishized commodity that advertises how special you are– like a homemade Martha Stewart-inspired centerpiece, or a plate of gluten-free treats brought to the kids’ soccer game, or an ecotourist vacation to a Central American resort run by indigenous peoples– doesn’t appreciate what people are trying to do when they go offline.

I’ve spent a lot of time interviewing digital Sabbatarians for my book, and for the ones who do it regularly, it’s not just about “unplugging.” It’s not simple an absence, and they’re often kind of reluctant to talk about it. As one person put it, “You don’t need to tell people you’re going offline, because that gives them a chance to object.” (The big exception is writers, who are– guess what?– writing about it. Because this is what writers do.) Instead, for them it’s a chance to enjoy the pleasure of making the choice to be offline; to engage deeply with things in a way that’s hard to do in the rapid-response, real-time, surf-and-jump world of online life; and ultimately to step into an alternate kind of time, an alternate experience of time.

To me, the best description of that time is in an unexpected place: Abraham Heschel’s wonderful 1951 book The Sabbath: Its Meaning for Modern Man. The Sabbath is a reflection on the meaning and value of the Sabbath; it doesn’t concern itself with how to observe the Sabbath, but with the deepest meaning of the day. It’s a jewel, small, multifaceted and brilliant, and one of the foundations of Heschel’s reputation as one of the twentieth century’s most prominent Jewish theologians.

Heschel argues that the Sabbath contains some radical ideas. It’s radically egalitarian: everyone, including servants and the poor—and even beasts of burden—have the right to enjoy the day. Ancient religions organized themselves around sacred places: gods were local creatures who lived in groves or forests or mountains, and priests could identify a specific site as the center of creation. The Sabbath, in contrast, declares that time is sacred, not place: in the account of Genesis, the world is “good,” but only the Sabbath day is “holy.” In contrast to place-based religions, Heschel concludes, Judaism “is a religion of time aiming at the sanctification of time,” and the Bible encourages readers to recognize that “every hour is unique and the only one given at a moment, exclusive and endlessly precious.”

All time is special, but foremost in Judaism’s “architecture of time,” the pinnacle of its rituals and commemorations, is the Sabbath. “The meaning of the Sabbath is to celebrate time,” he says, and even among Jewish rituals it is uniquely focused on giving practitioners a taste of the holy and eternal. The timing of most events in the Jewish calendar are set by nature or history, but the Sabbath’s rhythm isn’t tied to the lunar cycle or seasons. Rather, it mimics the cycle of Creation itself, and that rhythm exhorts believers to see time and space the way God made them. In this way, “the essence of the Sabbath is completely detached from the world of space.” The Sabbath offers an opportunity to “become attuned to holiness in time,” by building a “palace in time… made of soul, of joy and rectitude… a reminder of adjacency to eternity.”

Heschel’s ideas about time, renewal, and the relationship of the Sabbath to normal life, can help us unlock the real value of digital Sabbaths.

The central vision of the Sabbath as explicitly standing outside normal time, as a standing invitation us to experience a completely different sort of time, is as useful as ever. In ways that Heschel did not predict but would have appreciated, today’s digital devices and virtual spaces create a terribly intimate “tyranny of things.” We labor as people always have, “for the sake of things.” But, Heschel continues, “possessions become the symbols of our repressions, jubilees of frustrations…. Things, when magnified, are forgeries of happiness, they are a threat to our very lives.” Sound familiar?

Today, we live surrounded with objects that demand constant attention, and we conduct our everyday work and social lives through technologies that are used to compress our experience of time, to replace the rhythms of days and bodily metabolisms with the 24/7 “real time” of networks and markets. Sixty years later, Heschel’s warning that “we are more harassed than supported by the Frankensteins of spatial things” seems truer than ever, now that those Frankensteins have begun to demand their creators’ attention and love.

What Heschel offers is a day in which it’s all right to step away from all of that. For one day a week, it’s all right to “collect rather than to dissipate time,” to “mend our scattered lives.” Heschel’s Sabbath is a counterbalance against modern “technical civilization,” a way “to work with things of space but to be in love with eternity.”

Finally, for Heschel the Sabbath isn’t just a day of “rest,” in the sense of mindless leisure or diversion. The seventh day was not the end of creation, but its culmination: it was the day when God created happiness and tranquility, finished creation, and perfected the universe.

Consequently, Heschel argues, we’re obliged to recreate that happiness and tranquility. Further, he warns, “rest without spirit [is] the source of depravity. In other words, Sabbath rest is not a passive thing, but an active one. Avoiding work, for Heschel, did not mean being inactive. It meant avoiding the kinds of economic, “productive” busyness that occupied us for the other six days of the week, in order to create a space in which one could do other, more important things, and do them well. “Labor is a craft,” he says, “but perfect rest is an art. To attain a degree of excellence in art, one must accept its discipline, one must adjure slothfulness.” Heschel wasn’t advocating passive rest, in other words, but restoration.

People who have practiced digital Sabbaths for a long time use it to rebuild themselves, to reengage with friends, to relearn and exercise treasured pre-digital abilities, to do whatever they feel reconnects them with the real world. Turning off the million little requests and interactions that cascade into distraction and exhaustion is good, but trying to recover your mind by just unplugging is like trying to fix a building by abandoning it. The digital Sabbath not just defined by what you turn off and ignore, but by how you respect and use the silence. It is, to borrow Heschel’s description of the Jewish Sabbath, “the silence of abstaining from noisy acts.”

This is where digital Sabbatarians are headed. They intuit that behind the language of disconnection lies an opportunity to do something very profound: to mend our relationship with time, to learn how to collect rather than dissipate time, to experience a more majestic, mystical time– one that lengthens your capacity for attention, your appreciation of presence, and your ability to make meaning in life.

But you can’t do that if you believe that there is no longer any such thing as different forms of time; if you don’t believe that some of those kinds of time can provide a refuge from busyness and networks; or that you still have a choice about when and how to step outside and offline.

 

Twisting by the pool

Add New York Times reporter Jenna Wortham to the list of people who’ve discovered (and written about, which seems to be the inevitable step following) the pleasures of disconnecting:

One side effect of living an always-on digital life is the tension, along with the thrill, that can arise from being able to peep into people’s worlds at any moment and comparing their lives with yours. This tension may be inevitable at times, but it’s not inescapable. It’s possible to move beyond the angst that social media can provoke — and to be glad that we’ve done so.

I would add that beyond the good that comes of relieving the tension to live perpetually in “real time” (and there is no more artificial thing than “real time“), that there are constructive things you can do with this time. It’s not just the absence of tweets and updates and the knowledge that someone in your network is running a marathon, or watching a kid graduate, or in line to see Taylor Swift; it’s an opportunity to rediscover a form of time, and a way of experiencing time, that is very different– less frantic and demanding, obviously, but also one that lets you be more thoughtful and attentive.

The quiet day

This is an awesome idea, from the creator of the quiet place: the quiet day.

the quiet day is…

a day when we all stop yelling at each other. we write everything in lowercase.

during the quiet day you should not write anything with your caps-lock on (and no — don’t use the shift key either).

the use of lowercase writing can be a strong symbol that can show that we want some peace and quiet.

September 21. Mark your calendars, set a reminder.

On tweeting during concerts, and the purpose of criticism

San Jose Mercury News music critic Richard Scheinin has a piece about tweeting during concerts:

Earlier this month, I attended a concert by jazz trumpeter Terence Blanchard, who is something of a legend. Yet his twilight performance in a Los Gatos park turned out to be one of the strangest events I’ve attended in my nearly 10 years as a music reviewer — almost no one appeared to be listening.

The man to my left stared at his iPhone, idly flipping through his Twitter feed as Blanchard played his heart out on “Autumn Leaves.” The woman in front of me — when she wasn’t fishing through a bag of goodies from Whole Foods — also spent much time flipping through Twitter.

I would guess there were about 1,000 people packed into the little park, almost all of them immersed in conversation, sipping chilled wine or gazing at their smartphones, monitoring their email and Twitter accounts.

As the crowd relegated Blanchard and his band to background entertainment, I felt as if I were witnessing the downfall of civilization — the triumph of mindless technology over art.

So far, so good.

But here is the worst part: I was tweeting. Every 15 minutes or so, I was fashioning a news burst of 140 characters (maximum; that’s the rule), describing the music and the event to my followers on Twitter.

Part of me was wracked with guilt. I’m a lifelong jazz fanatic, and I believe that music deserves full attention and emotional commitment. Still, I had my professional obligation to tweet; we’ve entered a new digital age in journalism, with newspapers reaching out to new audiences via social media.

Okay, let’s take a break and review. My first thought here was, yes, we are witnessing the downfall of civilization, in the form of the people who should be paying the most attention to a concert self-distracting themselves, and implicitly giving others permission to do so.

I don’t want to just declare that live tweeting is always mind-numbing for the author, distracting to neighbors, and insulting to a performer. Let’s leave aside slow, boring events that leave lots of time for checking email, going to the bathroom, running some chores, etc. (I’m looking at you, golf and professional cycling); let’s focus on events that are supposed to require a viewer’s full attention, like a musical performance. Can you tweet in a way that improves the experience?

If criticism has any purpose in today’s crowdsourced five-star “Like” world, it isn’t to instruct the rest of us about what to think about books or records or performances. Critics show us how to listen critically, to read critically, to look critically. (Anyone who still has their dog-eared copies of Adler and Van Doren’s How to Read a Book will remember this.) This is not “critically” in the sense of looking for flaws, but critically in the sense of carefully, closely engaging with a text or play, with an understanding of what the performer is trying to do, and how their work fits in a bigger artistic tradition.

In other words, paying attention. Paying a specialized, well-informed kind attention, but paying attention.

Live tweeting, it seems to me, is very hard to do critically, or hard to balance with the work of criticism. It olds great potential to be disruptive. It’s difficult to split your attention between the event, and as Scheinin puts it, “swiftly crafting an impression of an event, touching the “send” button, and watching your tweet fly out into the big world.” It would be incredibly hard to explain in real time, and in 140 characters, who Blanchard’s version of “Autumn Leaves” comares with any of the hundred other great versions of that standard (I’m not a big jazz guy, but my iPhone has versions by Bill Evans, Wynton Marsalis, Eva Cassidy, and Edith Paif), to describe what Blanchard brings out in the song that others don’t, or even to just note the interesting subtleties of the performance.

In fact, here’s what Scheinin tweets about “Autumn Leaves:”

Oakland-bred Justin Brown is on drums with Terence Blanchard who’s giving Autumn Leaves a ’60s Miles treatment.

Now, you can get a sense of what it was like from “60s Miles treatment,” but I’ll bet there’s a lot more one could say with more time– with the sort of time you spend when writing a longer review, for example. Indeed, with the sort of time of take to write something like this:

Blanchard was in a Miles Davis-y mood — playing lonely, piercing cries on the trumpet during “Nocturna,” a moody ballad by Brazilian songwriter Ivan Lins.

“Wandering Wonder,” a Blanchard original, started at a simmer and became a wild, Miles-y electric stew, with thick swirls of percolating patter from young drummer Justin Brown, who’s from Oakland and now is a first-call player in New York; lush acoustic piano jabs and synth-keyboard scrambles from Fabian Almazan, who grew up in Havana, accompanied the piece. Blanchard, plugged in by a foot pedal, became many Blanchards, throwing clutches of high notes at the crowd.

So can you tweet and be a critic? In essence, can you incorporate those 140 characters into your focus on, and appreciation of, a performance?

Maybe, if you approach it as a form of note-taking, dashing off impressions of moments that you’ll elaborate on later in greater detail. As a medium for expressing the excitement of a good performance, or noting something distinctive, Twitter could be useful. In this way, you stand a chance both of giving people who care a sense of the moment, and in so doing become more attuned to the moment yourself.

If you try to write a tiny review, though, you’re going to fail: you don’t have enough space, and the effort you spend trying to construct something pithy and witty will distract you from the performance.

Arguably, a great real time critic would give you a sense of what the experience of watching Terence Blanchard was like: not just cataloging the event, but choosing those few details and seconds that readers could use to reconstruct the event for themselves. This would be a different kind of demanding than traditional criticism, but the two aren’t mutually exclusive: the later could build on the former.

Finally, you couldn’t do it in an environment where it would cause a disturbance. At the concert, Blanchard

was battling an ever-stronger, 21st century connection: that between Silicon Valley concertgoers and their iPhones. Wow, were there ever a lot of people flipping through their email and Twitter accounts as Blanchard’s quintet began its twilight performance…. a line of well-dressed young women moved through the eastern side of the park, shouting greetings to friends, trading hugs. You could see the response of the jazz hounds sprinkled through the audience: they clapped dutifully for Winston’s solo, intent on maintaining protocol and buoying the band.

I this kind of environment, one more smartphone isn’t going to make much of a difference. But try doing this in Carnegie Hall, or Yoshis.

A while ago I decided that I would not try to blog or tweet conferences or talks in real time, that I could be more useful writing longer reflections later (like this reflection on the d.compress show and this note on the Being Human conference). Lots of other people live tweet events, and my typing “P
erson X takes the stage #conference-tag” doesn’t add as much as writing something more thoughtful later. It also lets me focus on my own notes, and listen more carefully.

So I think it’s possible in theory to use twitter in an interesting critical way, in a manner that brings of more into the moment; but it would be very difficult, and require a kind of Zen archery level of effortless engagement with the medium that’s hard to achieve.

Meditation apps and the cost of experience

I’ve been looking recently at meditation apps, and have been struck by a few things.

First of all, there are a LOT of them, many more than I expected. In the iTunes store you can find pages and pages of them.

Second, it’s clear that the cost of developing them can be pretty low compared to some other kinds of software. The barriers to entry for producers is consequently pretty low.

Third, apps bring down the financial and logistical cost of experimenting with meditation practices. For the cost of a book, I can buy three or four different apps, each offering a different approach to meditation, and none of the requiring much of my time.

I was recently talking to Rohan Guntillake, creator of the excellent app Buddhify, and he pointed out that going to “a class at 6 pm for 8 weeks is a high investment, and it’s not practical for many people.” When he asked himself, “Can you lower the barrier?” he started thinking seriously about mobile apps, both because they’re an existing platform, but also because they’re present where people are most likely to need calm, or have a moment to practice. As he explains,

The thing that makes it [Buddhify] really work is that it’s specifically for when you already listen to your headphones. The behavior change is very small. it’s easier to get you to listen to Buddhify than Justin Bieber, than to get you to go to a class with incense and all that. It minimizes the behavior change on the user.

Update: I should add that I’m working on a magazine article on calming technologies, Zenware, and mediation apps, hence my interest. Watch this space for updates!

 

Book cover!

Here’s the cover for the contemplative computing book:


via

Little, Brown spent a lot of time on it, and I think they’ve managed to communicate a lot in a very small, challenging medium. They were also really good about explaining the design choices, making clear that they thought worked, and accommodating those changes I thought would improve it (or explaining why they would be hard to implement).

So the machine chugs along, and we get one step closer to having a finished book on the shelves!

 

Texting drivers “could travel the length of a football field without looking at the street”

A recent study by the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute found that

people who were texting while driving were 23 times more likely to crash or nearly crash than non-distracted drivers. They also found that drivers who were texting spent 4.6 out of every 6 seconds staring at something other than the road, meaning that if they were traveling at 55 mph, they could travel the length of a football field without looking at the street.

 

“The average American first checks their phone around 7:09 a.m.”

Some scary statistics from a new survey by mobile device company Good.

  • 68 percent of people check their work emails before 8 a.m.
  • The average American first checks their phone around 7:09 a.m.
  • 50 percent check their work email while still in bed
  • The work day is growing – 40 percent still do work email after 10 p.m.
  • 69 percent will not go to sleep without checking their work email
  • 57 percent check work emails on family outings
  • 38 percent routinely check work emails while at the dinner table

Wow.

Texting while fighting

C. J. Chivers, author of a great book about the AK-47, is in Syria, and got this picture:

Machine gun in right hand. Cell phone in left. On duty on the gun-truck’s machine gun, at 80 miles an hour into Aleppo, checking messages along the way.

Even as the war in Syria rages, large areas of the countryside have cellular phone coverage, and the fighters are constantly checking their phones. When they stop, many of them immediately look for ways to recharge their phone batteries. And, often as they move and enter an area with a strong signal, they commence texting back and forth.

Awesome.

 

Bertrand Russell on the “fatal… habit of thinking of the ‘next thing'”

I’ve been listening to the BBC Reith Lectures while walking the dog, and this bit from Bertrand Russell’s 1948 series on “Authority and the Individual” (mp3, or transcript) caught me this evening:

But as men grow more industrialised and regimented, the kind of delight that is common in children becomes impossible to adults because they are always thinking of the next thing and cannot let themselves be absorbed in the moment. This habit of thinking of the ‘next thing’ is more fatal to any kind of aesthetic excellence than any other habit of mind that can be imagined, and if art, in any important sense, is to survive it will not be by the foundation of solemn academies, but by recapturing the capacity for wholehearted joys and sorrows which prudence and foresight have all but destroyed. (emphasis added)

Naturally I latched onto it as an argument about the importance of maintaining a capacity for attention– that ability to be “absorbed in the moment”– but there’s also resonance with both Csikszentmihalyi’s work on flow and creativity, and with arguments about the downside of over-programming or over-managing innovation.

Anyway, the Reith Lectures are my new favorite thing. The old ones have those marvelously plummy (what a perfect word) announcers. You could write a whole book about the English language– or a short, phenomenally successful one– by tracking the accents and tenor of BBC announcers.

The lectures were also later published as a book.

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