[Infowarrior] - good read -- Turn Off, Tune Out, Drop In

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Thu Apr 2 01:30:14 UTC 2009


Most prescient part of the article?  'TMI may indeed be the despot's  
friend. Keep citizens so overwhelmed with data that they can't tell  
what's important and eventually become incapable of responding to what  
is."    --rf


Turn Off, Tune Out, Drop In

By Kathleen Parker
Wednesday, April 1, 2009; 12:00 AM

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/31/AR2009033103318_pf.html

What if everybody just took a timeout?

Now there's a concept for a TMI-addled nation. It isn't only Too Much  
Information, but the pitch and tenor of delivery that have us in a  
persistent state of psychic frenzy. From cable news to microblogs to  
the latest -- "Fox Nation" -- life's background music has become one  
prolonged car alarm.

The market's up! The Dow plunges! Obama fired the GM CEO! Greta's  
husband helped Palin!! OMG, Obama's taking 500 people to Europe and  
Merkel doesn't like his new deal and they're taking our assault  
weapons and we're all going to be communists!!

But first, if your erection lasts for more than four hours, contact  
your physician immediately.

The phrase "too much information," a now-cliched talk-to-the-hand  
deflection, isn't just a gentle whack at someone who tells you more  
than you want to know about his Cialis experience. It's a toxic asset  
that exhausts our cognitive resources while making the nonsensical  
seem significant.

TMI may indeed be the despot's friend. Keep citizens so overwhelmed  
with data that they can't tell what's important and eventually become  
incapable of responding to what is. Our brains simply aren't wired to  
receive and process so much information in such a compressed period.

In 2006, the world produced 161 exabytes (an exabyte is 1 quintillion  
bytes) of digital data, according to Columbia Journalism Review. Put  
in perspective, that's 3 million times the information contained in  
all the books ever written. By next year, the number is expected to  
reach 988 exabytes.

The massive explosion of information has made us all a little batty.  
Just ask the congressional assistants who field frantic phone calls  
from constituents.

"Everybody's come unhinged," one told me recently. "They think we're  
going to hell in a handbasket. And maybe we are."

Who knows?

The unknowableness of current circumstances, combined with a lack of  
trust in our institutions, may partly be to blame for our apparent  
info-insatiability. People sense that they need to know more in order  
to understand an increasingly complex world.

And, of course, it's fun. The urge to know and be known is a uniquely  
human indulgence. Being connected to friends and colleagues without  
having to inconvenience one's gluteus maximus surely must stimulate  
our pleasure center or we wouldn't bother.

Yet, with so much data coming from all directions, we risk paralysis.  
Brain freeze, some call it. More important, we also risk losing our  
ability to process the Big Ideas that might actually serve us better.  
It isn't only Jack and Jill who are tethered to the Twittering masses,  
after all. Our thinkers at the highest levels are, too.

Consider: Who didn't want to surrender his BlackBerry?

In fact, brain research shows that we do our best thinking when we're  
not engaged and focused, yet fewer of us have time for downtime. (If  
you have to schedule relaxation, is it still relaxing?)

Daydreaming, we used to call it. Ask any creative person where they  
got their best ideas and they'll say, "Dunno. Just came to me out of  
the blue." If you're looking for Eureka -- as in the Aha! moment --  
you probably won't find it while following David Gregory's Tweets. Or  
checking Facebook to see who might be "friending" whom. Or whose  
status has been updated. George Orwell is . . . More likely, the ideas  
that save the world will present themselves in the shower or while  
we're sweeping the front stoop. What the world needs now isn't more,  
but less. The alternative to mindless activities for the mindful is  
turning out to be not a less-informed nation but a dumber one.

Unchecked "infomania" -- yes, there's even a term for this  
instapathology -- can lead to a lower IQ, according to a 2005 Hewlett- 
Packard study. The research, conducted by a University of London  
psychologist, found that people distracted by e-mail and phone calls  
lost 10 IQ points, more than twice the impact of smoking marijuana --  
or comparable to losing a night's sleep.

Given that the brain is apparently more receptive when less focused,  
might our myriad problems stand a better chance of creative solutions  
were we more unplugged? In the literal sense, that is.

Back in the day, Timothy Leary urged boomers to "turn on, tune in,  
drop out," which was his snappy way of encouraging the mind-expanding  
benefits of LSD. (It came to him in the shower, natch.)

A more-apt mantra today might be "turn off, tune out, drop in." Turn  
off the switch, tune out the noise, drop in on a friend.

Can't hurt. Might help.

Hitting pause now . . .

kparker at kparker.com 


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