Gulf News

Life without social media and virtues of being social

Having weaned off the 24-hour news cycle and reading arguments online, you can rediscover chatting to neighbours

- By Mark Boyle

At the end of last year, I gave up the technologi­es that transmit news and social media. But I actually quit the media itself a year before that. Like all good decisions, it was made in the pub, with a friend. Until then I would keep religiousl­y informed about world affairs online — via the Guardian, naturally — over breakfast every morning.

It wasn’t that I thought news to be a bad thing per se — though most of it tends to be bad news — but I no longer wished to read it. For a start, I found it was becoming boring. As Henry David Thoreau wrote in the 19th century, long before Twitter and 24-hour news: “If we read of one man robbed, or murdered, or killed by accident, or one house burned, or one vessel wrecked, or one steamboat blown up ... we never read of another. One is enough.” It has all become a bit like a Hollywood movie: Same storylines, different characters.

That said, I would often miss the opinion pages, especially those that explored ideas that could benefit the world around us. The conundrum, however, as I saw it was that the technologi­es behind the new, relentless news was part of the problem, harming journalism itself.

I didn’t like how reading the news made me feel as I ate my porridge. Terrorism! Scandal! Murder! Economic growth too slow! Corruption! Celebrity says something stupid! Downing Street press release says government is doing great work! The big bad world became even badder. I also felt that it distracted me from what was going on around me — my neighbours, the flora and fauna outside my front doorstep, the land under my feet.

I’ve heard on the grapevine that everyone’s been getting hot and bothered about a big, very important election, where one group of people you wouldn’t trust to babysit your children took on a handful of other people you wouldn’t trust to look after your dog.

Sometimes, I unwillingl­y stumble across news items when starting the fire. The Daily Mail, incidental­ly, makes great tinder. I often find a copy lurking in a recycling bin, and take it out to burn on the basis that its contents have probably already been recycled enough. The edition I tore some sheets from this morning appears to be full of people trying to be famous for 15 minutes and not, as the Pulitzer prize-winning poet Gary Snyder recommende­d, for 15 miles.

Friends have told me they think it’s irresponsi­ble not to keep up with world affairs — what’s happening with the Syrian refugee crisis, the escalation of words between the US and North Korea (or somewhere else by the time this is published), or any of the countless ecological crises afflicting the world. Unless we do, they say, we cannot respond appropriat­ely. I understand their perspectiv­e, and perhaps they are right, but the world is not going to shift for the lack of news these days.

Positive News

Last week, I watched two ant nations warring to death, while I sat above them as the sun went down. On my way to the post office this morning I called in to a neighbour, to see if he needed anything. It was really an excuse to see how he was, as I know he suffers from mild depression from time to time. He told me he was fine for everything, and we chinwagged for a while. A bit further on, I bumped into another neighbour whose car had broken down, and as we scratched our chins thinking what to do about it, he told me that an old boy I knew had just died. At the post office I overheard two farmers talking about the impact of Brexit on their livelihood­s. They disagreed, but they were both laughing. On my way home, I found a dead fox on the road, and noticed a pine marten shoot into the woods, off to terrorise some creature that had no idea that this would be its last day of life.

I won’t ever get to read my own online articles — I have to trust my editor, and do — but I do read the selected comments he sends me. Some raise important, interestin­g points. I ought to respond to a few of the more thoughtful ones.

News doesn’t have to be bad. Media organisati­ons such as Positive News — which I’m a supporter of — are pioneering “constructi­ve journalism”, giving a more balanced view of what is happening in the world.

We need more calm, thoughtful ideas and less sensationa­list journalism that harms, celebrity news that distracts, and nonsense with underlying assumption­s that aren’t questioned. We need fewer people shouting at one another, and more people listening to one another. We need to start talking to our neighbours again, to find out all of the things — good and bad — that are happening to them.

Until that starts to happen, no news is good news.

Mark Boyle writes the Guardian’s ‘Life Without Technology’ column. He is the author of books including The Moneyless Man (Oneworld) and Drinking Molotov Cocktails with Gandhi (Permanent). For full article, log on to: www.gulfnews.com/opinions

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