Ottawa Citizen

Connect to more than internet by putting down smartphone­s

- STEVE MAXWELL Steve Maxwell offers Canada’s largest collection of hands-on, how-to content online. Check out his no-nonsense articles, videos and projects at BaileyLine­Road.com.

Pete is a drywall contractor friend who’s always quick with a joke and a smile, and he mentioned something once that I won’t forget. “If I hire a drywaller who smokes, I should pay them $2 an hour less because of smoke breaks. If that smoker also has a smartphone, they’re worth $10 an hour less because of screen breaks.” Pete laughed as he said this, but it was the kind of laugh that covers something big and tragic. In the same way that smoking was once mistakenly prescribed by some doctors as a health-boosting habit, and toxic lead water pipes were routinely installed in new homes and considered “safe” until the 1920s, screen addiction is stealing the social skills, productivi­ty, creativity and hands-on capabiliti­es of millions of people. So many folks don’t seem to realize the debilitati­on. According to Canadian-based MTM Media Technology Monitor, in 2016 the average Canadian spent 3.5 hours per day online; five hours per day for people 18 to 34. Based on what I’ve seen, these numbers seem understate­d. What would Canada look like if everyone redirected just half their screen time to something physical, productive, face-to-face and hands-on? I should mention up front that I’m a big fan of the productive possibilit­ies offered by the internet. I earn most of my income online while living on a remote rural island in Ontario, and the internet makes countless things better in my life. The ice maker in my fridge doesn’t work right now, but I’m not worried. The internet will let me troublesho­ot the problem and buy parts easily and at a reasonable price. My dog is alive today because the internet helped me diagnose and successful­ly treat her condition as blastomyco­sis when vets were baffled. I’m working remotely with a man from California right now who is building a bottled water production facility in Nigeria. He found my educationa­l videos online, tracked me down and now I’m teaching him about wells, pumps and ozone sterilizat­ion of water. Right now I’m designing a cabin dream home for a family in Oklahoma online, and I can keep my old, beloved 1990 pickup truck running well, because of what I learn on the internet and the parts I can buy. I could go on and on about the benefits the internet has brought to my life. So, if the internet is so good, why am I worried? Simply because there are two sides to every coin. While the internet is the biggest and most powerful force for worthwhile learning and productivi­ty in human history, it’s also the biggest and most powerful force ever for killing time, talents, morals and relationsh­ips. This is especially true since the advent of the smartphone. Like a lab animal conditione­d to get another dose of morphine with every push of a button, the insatiable draw towards social sharing, games and the latest “news” has all the hallmarks of chemical addiction. I know a clinical psychologi­st and she tells me that the symptoms of digital addiction she sees regularly in her practice are identical in nature and physiology to chemical addictions. No responsibl­e parent would give a loaded syringe of heroin to their child, yet it’s common to find kids under 10 with phones and unrestrict­ed internet access. I know of grade schoolchil­dren at recess in schoolyard­s who watch porn on their phones that’s worse than what was illegal to sell out of a trench coat in a back alley a few decades ago. Smartphone­s are the lead water pipe of the 21st century. So what can you do? I figure it comes down to one old-fashioned quality. Discipline. Are we discipline­d enough to use the great and productive things the internet has to offer, without having our lives and kids waste away in destructiv­e digital past times? I sure hope so.

 ??  ?? Steve Maxwell warns that portable, hand-held digital technology is both a blessing and a bane for our society and productivi­ty.
Steve Maxwell warns that portable, hand-held digital technology is both a blessing and a bane for our society and productivi­ty.
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