Content
Archives
- August 2010 (2)
- July 2010 (4)
- June 2010 (15)
- May 2010 (15)
- April 2010 (23)
- March 2010 (9)
- February 2010 (32)
- January 2010 (7)
- December 2009 (22)
- November 2009 (19)
- October 2009 (27)
- September 2009 (21)
- August 2009 (17)
- July 2009 (36)
- June 2009 (29)
- May 2009 (9)
- April 2009 (21)
- March 2009 (118)
- February 2009 (120)

Distractions – the benefits of overstimulation
On a day-to-day basis, I find it hard to get anything done of significant value. It seems unlikely, though, since I’m always preoccupied with the mundane multitasking of multiple stimuli. Since closing down my Facebook a year ago, my attention has turned to googling random things. That sidebar google search on my browser has been used and utterly abused. There’s the constant updating of Twitter, random e-mail checks with, as usual, no important messages, and the monotony of ‘instant message received’ coming through my chat client. And then there’s this blog here that I’ve so casually neglected. NY Mag’s piece on our attention spans in the 21st Century, The Benefits of Distraction and Overstimulation, reminds me of how little I accomplish with so much at my disposal.
Isolation seems to be a natural bi-product of the Internet age despite the growing trend toward social networking. Cursory communication has numbed our sense and do not nearly replace the full experience of leaving the web. The brief bursts of stimulation seems to have conditioned me to be very spacey, and all the bummin’ around I’ve been doing lately has reached a critical mass.
Internet, I can’t quit you.