ON PHONES
There was a dinner once, years ago now, that struck me with the force of prophecy. A gathering of friends, intelligent people, funny people, people with whom conversation had once stretched deep into the night, where arguments, jokes, gossip, philosophy, and trivial nonsense all mixed together in that ancient human ritual of communal eating. Yet on this occasion something had changed, though at first it was almost imperceptible. The table remained. The food arrived. Drinks were poured. Bodies occupied the chairs. But the animating principle of the gathering had vanished.
Everyone was staring downward.
For nearly two hours the room existed in a state of suspended social animation. Fingers twitched across glowing surfaces. Faces periodically illuminated by tiny artificial flashes of information. Someone would laugh faintly at something occurring elsewhere, in another invisible dimension entirely, while the actual human beings seated inches away drifted further into irrelevance. Conversation no longer flowed; it sputtered. Presence itself became fragmented. It was as though I had watched a species quietly surrender one of its defining characteristics without even realizing it was happening.
One hears endless rhetoric about connectivity, community, democratization, technological liberation, but sitting there I experienced the opposite sensation entirely. The smartphone did not appear as a communication device. It appeared as an extraction device. An apparatus that harvested attention from immediate reality and redirected it into an endless system of managed distraction. The machine had not merely entered social life; it had colonized the pauses, the silences, the ambiguities, the moments from which genuine conversation and reflection once emerged.
The disturbing thing was not the technology itself. Humans have always invented tools. The disturbing thing was the passivity. Nobody at the table appeared consciously to choose the device over the people beside them. The movement had become automatic, almost liturgical. Reach. Check. Scroll. React. Repeat. A kind of low-grade behavioral possession masquerading as convenience.
And this, perhaps, is the real revolution of the smartphone age: not that human beings communicate more, but that uninterrupted human presence has become intolerable. The modern citizen increasingly experiences silence as anxiety, boredom as pathology, unmediated thought as discomfort. Every empty second must be filled, every lull exterminated. The old capacities — observation, patience, sustained listening, private reflection — begin to atrophy from disuse.
There is an old warning from totalitarian literature that tyranny does not always arrive marching in boots. Sometimes it arrives smiling, offering efficiency, entertainment, personalization, convenience. The most effective systems of control are those voluntarily carried in the pocket, lovingly polished, endlessly refreshed, defended by the very people most subordinated by them. What previous empires achieved through censorship and force, the modern attention economy often achieves through seduction.
I left that dinner with an unsettling realization: if this trajectory continued, entire modes of human experience might quietly disappear. Not through dramatic prohibition, but through neglect. The art of conversation. The capacity for solitude. The strange creative fertility of boredom. The accidental encounter. The undirected walk. The unrecorded memory. The ability to sit across from another person and remain fully there.
So I began withdrawing from the device, slowly at first, then almost entirely. Not because I imagined myself purer than anyone else, nor because technological primitivism holds much appeal, but because I suspected something essential was being eroded beneath the rhetoric of progress. And once one has seen the transformation clearly, it becomes difficult to unsee. The smartphone was sold as an instrument of freedom. Yet increasingly it resembled a portable system of behavioral management, carried voluntarily into every intimate corner of human existence.
The deepest irony is that people now fear disconnection more than domination. Silence terrifies them more than surveillance. To be unreachable for an afternoon appears almost socially deviant. But perhaps the truly radical act in the twenty-first century is simply this: to reclaim one’s own attention from the machinery perpetually designed to fragment it.