One major decision I recently made is to try to minimize the time I spend consuming internet- and video-game-based entertainment. I realized that I consider almost all of the time I spend on those things to be effectively completely wasted. It doesn't make me happier, it doesn't get any of my schoolwork done, it doesn't each me anything, and it doesn't facilitate any social interaction (unless it's a video-game played at a LAN party or something, which I'd consider differently). I have observed that both I and most of my friends waste almost all of our free time on such things, and we could spend that free time either being productive or doing something that is slightly higher-effort but much more rewarding (like reading books, playing piano, playing a board game or talking with friends, going for a hike or otherwise exploring the outdoors, etc).
I've spent the last couple years trying to spend more of my time on those worthwhile things: trying to prioritize my classes, piano, outdoors, exercise, reading, etc. But I've finally realized that the core problem is my (and pretty much all of my peers') obsession with/addiction to low-effort activities and low-effort entertainment. I just need to judiciously avoid stupid low-effort wastes of time, and I'll much more easily find other more productive things to do during that time instead. It's working out well so far.
I think my parents had a better college experience than any of my friends or I am currently having. They made better friends and did more memorable things with them. I blame the internet for stealing our time. If we didn't always have such easy access to stupid low-effort entertainment, we'd be motivated to find more worthwhile ways to entertain ourselves.
Generally speaking, low-effort things suck, the easiest thing to do at any given time is never actually worth doing, and the worth/productivity/happiness/reward gotten out of any activity is generally proportional to how difficult it was. Kind of like Reddit: it sucks now compared to five years ago because almost all of the content and discussion is much lower-effort now compared to five years ago.
I don't want to waste the bulk of my college years neither learning nor making/doing something cool nor going out and actually doing things with my friends. And the way I plan to start to do that is by avoiding the single foremost thief of my time: the stupid internet.
~
(Copypasta from a comment I just wrote; thought it might get more useful feedback and discussion here.)
The Internet is what you make of it. I first met "the Internet" when it was ARPANet. Everyone who was anyone in my home town had an acoustic coupling device to talk to the Crays at work. However, kids didn't get to play with that. We visited my aunt, though, who had the exact same acoustic coupler and dot-matrix pistachio'n'white wormstrip printer and you could use it to play DUNGEN (aka Zork) on the university computer. That was eight. I didn't see "The Internet" again until Freshman year, when my university had 20 2400baud and 2 9600baud modems you could use to dial into their DEC PDP-11s. Laptops were monochrome. Windows 3.11 was state-of-the-art. My sophomore year NCSA Mosaic was replaced by Netscape and PINE was slowly supplanted by Eudora. My junior year they started stringing CAT5 cable in the dorms and Fraunhaufer leaked the MP3 codec. My senior year professors started asking us for our email addresses. Not a one of them used them for anything, though. By the time Youtube came out I'd been out of college more than half a decade. I mention this only to say that people like me - and it's a very narrow band - are the only ones who have really seen the world with "the internet" and the world without. So while you can say "the Internet is wasting our lives" I don't think you fully understand what your life would be like without. Imagine picking your music by perusing a catalog and looking at album covers, then waiting a week for your tapes to come in. Imagine playing multiplayer games via the post office. Imagine going to the library whenever you need facts. Finally, imagine a massive underground black market in SLP VHS tapes of low-budget pornography, of 3-year-old Penthouse and Hustler magazines hoarded and coveted by pimply-faced teenagers, of flipping back and forth every three seconds to see that brief half-second flash of clarity on the Playboy Channel or Skinemax where the decoder and the filter align for a brief, shining moment. Things were different. So allow me to make a few observations of you and your peers, from my lofty position of growing up as the Internet did, rather than stumbling upon it fully formed: - You use it as an excuse. There are amazing wonders on the Internet but you don't use it for that. - You use it as a crutch. I have more empathy than you. I am more eloquent than you. I handle social situations better than you. This is because so many of your interactions happen in a context-free text-based environment where you have no subtext to work with. Consequently I can out-argue you 99 times out of 100 because my Gymkhana was more stringent. I would not be mixing television in Hollywood if it were not for the Internet. I've optioned two screenplays because of friends I made over the Internet. And I find the Internet to be absolutely spectacular at finding things for me to do in the real world. I ride one of twelve Benelli Tre Ks in the Western Hemisphere. If it weren't for an exceedingly friendly online community I never would take the risk. As it is, any problem I encounter I have immediate help from Scotland to Adelaide. In 1993 I had to make a long distance call to Australia to look up a block number on a Chevy V6 because I thought it was a Holden (turns out it was a Mercruiser). Nowadays you just feed that string into Google and it'll tell you. * * * My generation wasted time, too. All generations did. The collective GPA of all quarter-based schools from 1994 to 2001 is probably a few points lower because TBS always ran Bond marathons during finals week. WoW wasn't a thing but f'ing DOOM sure was. Ridiculous amounts of time on Saturday nights were spent trying to beat EVO or Pilot Wings. And just like you, we drank too much cheap crap, smoked too much cheap weed and kicked ourselves for time wasted. The difference is we didn't blame the Internet, we blamed the Nintendo. Or the television. You're wasting time because you're a time waster, not because you have access to the wonders of the world. If you have time management issues, I could lock you in a racquetball court with a physics textbook and a Rubik's Cube and you'd know no more about Netwon's laws than you do now. Before people stared at television in the evening they stared at the fire. If you aren't enjoying your life, look in the mirror. Be the change you want to see in the world.
Right as usual. OP, if the internet
doesn't make me happier, it doesn't get any of my schoolwork done, it doesn't each me anything, and it doesn't facilitate any social interaction
then you're using it wrong. It does all four of those things at varying times for me, and so does being offline.
If you read more carefully, you would have noticed that I wasn't referring to the internet when I said that. I was referring to the time I spend consuming internet- and video-game-based entertainment.
I'm well aware that there are innumerable productive uses for the internet and that it is an invaluable and inexhaustible resource for improvement of myself and society. I'm complaining about the time I waste on the parts of the internet that aren't worth my time.
A response worthy of badging, but I don't have any left. You really hit the nail on the head here; the problem isn't in the things I use to waste time but in my own time-wasting faculty. It becomes a bigger problem when one knows this and doesn't change, and feels ashamed for knowing and doing nothing, and more ashamed for being ashamed and doing nothing about one's shame, and... A downward spiral that feeds into itself forever! But today is a good morning; I actually leapt out of bed and didn't hit the snooze button. I believe in a new kind of me...
Although I convicted the internet for providing "easy access to stupid low-effort entertainment", I don't think it will or should change. I know I can't hold anything or anyone except myself responsible for what I spend my time on. I think you and I are referring to different sets of things by "time-wasting". I generally am a good and productive student. I work hard and I get a lot done. I always strive to do more, but I do not think that I spend too much time on entertaining things rather than "work". I think that's what you refer to when you talk about time wasted: time spent on unproductive activities. I wish my unproductive activities were different. When I talk about wasting time, I mean unproductive time spent on things that don't provide me with much reward or happiness. You point out that while the entertainment media have changed drastically between your college years and mine, the existence of easy and unproductive activities hasn't changed. That's actually exactly what I'm complaining about. I realize the internet is a wonderful resource and is revolutionizing the world in countless positive ways. But when it comes to entertaining ourselves, I wish we had to depend on the means available before the internet. I think they are more rewarding. However, you aren't wrong. Many of the things I wish I spent my free time on haven't changed over the last thirty years, and I would have found another low-effort thing to do instead of them if I had gone to college with you, such as reading good books and playing piano. I'm a time waster because I'm a time waster. My post was certainly intended to serve as a self-conviction of such. I want to stop doing stupid low-effort things. But you certainly put it a lot more clearly than I did (perhaps that's why I'm writing kind of defensively: you pointed out the truth, and the truth is that I suck). I just wish my friends would more readily talk with me or go do something crazy with me (or even play video-games with me, as I mentioned in my OP) than they would spend their bored hours watching pirated TV or browsing the Reddit frontpage alone in their rooms. Then again, maybe I'm just a complainer looking for somewhere else to shift the blame for lacking the social experience I wish I had. What do you think?
No, I think we're talking about the exact same thing. However, you missed the most important part of my argument: Listen closely, because I mean this will all my heart and because it may be one of the most important things you've ever heard: You are jealous of us not because we grew up without the Internet, but because we grew up with OTHER PEOPLE without the Internet. My generation "peoples" better than you. We're better at parties, we're better on dates, we're better in the courtroom, we're better at negotiating salaries, we're better at getting hired, we're better at buying cars, we're better at telling jokes. That you CAN blame on The Internet. We're oh so very much better at forming human connections than you are. It's an arrogant thing to say. Trust me, I'm aware. But in my lofty position as Father Confessor of Reddit I get a lot of PMs. And they're invariably about someone's inability to connect or communicate with someone else. And, just as invariably, it's because this young man or woman straight-up sucks at reading body language. At parsing subtext. At putting themselves in the shoes of others. Look - I didn't go to High School in the era of Facebook. Fuck - I didn't go to High School in the era of pagers. My social dance was vastly different than yours. I won't say simpler, I won't say more nuanced. But all that shit you guys have to do online in order to maintain a social life? We didn't have to do any of it. Which means all the time and energy that we put into passing notes or flirting in the halls or wearing that shirt she commented on or playing the right song on the jukebox? You guys have to blow it on a Friends list 1500 deep. And that sucks for you. It fucks you up. It means you're spending less time having a life and more time doctoring spin. It Has Warped You. That's why I recommended "Alone Together." Sherry Turkle is the preeminent expert on online relationships. "Alone Together" is the third book in a trilogy she started with The Second Self in 1984. She's got the figures to back it up. And she's got a few ways out. Your problem isn't that you're wasting time, your problem is that you aren't finding fulfillment. And that's the real meat of what I said, and that's where we come back to agree: "The Internet" is responsible. The fact that you put a LAN party as a legit social occasion is really telling; the first time we stringed four computers together to play DOOM we were the biggest, loserest nerds on campus and everybody knew it, including us. It was far and away the most antisocial thing we could have done. It was putting a thing between our interpersonal interactions, despite the fact that we were in the same room. Simply put, your friends haven't learned how to be friendly. None of you have. I answer your PMs every day. You're lonely, you're frustrated, you're unfulfilled and you feel cheated of some of the prime experiences of your young life. And I agree with you. My daughter is a few months old. By the time she's old enough to interact with other people online Google Glass will be as old-hat as the iPod. Yet despite the fact that her grandfather created the first network in the history of the Department of Energy, I'm front-loading that kid's social interactions with as much in-human, in-person, face-to-face interactions as I can. In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king. Look - I'm Generation X, one of the last of them. My parents weren't baby boomers. When we were your age, we were the slackers. We were the ne'er do wells. We were the losers that dwelled in basements, listened to Grunge and did nothing with our lives. Our idol was Kurt Cobain, who was widely derided as a pretty poor substitute for John Lennon. And then we came up with Yahoo, and then we came up with Google, and now we own your parents. But in doing so, we saddled you with this piss-poor social life because we could and because we didn't know how terrible it would be. I think very, very few people have awoken to that fact. So be one of the first - recognize that yes, you got shafted. Yes, none of your peers know what to do in a crowd. Yes, if it weren't for online dating you guys would do nothing but spank it to hentai and yes, the whole "asexual" movement is related to the fact that you guys suck ass at forming a human connection with anyone you share a room with. And then do something about it. If there are 50 guys and 1 girl she isn't going to go with the hunk - she's going to go with the one who makes her laugh, makes her smile, and makes her feel like opening up. And if the other 49 are too busy asking their wingmen for advice over IM, you win. be the change you want to see in the world.I think you and I are referring to different sets of things by "time-wasting".
- You use it as a crutch. I have more empathy than you. I am more eloquent than you. I handle social situations better than you. This is because so many of your interactions happen in a context-free text-based environment where you have no subtext to work with. Consequently I can out-argue you 99 times out of 100 because my Gymkhana was more stringent.
Sorry in advance for the short response to such a long comment, but I think you've misjudged this a bit. I too was born in the nineties, and I too understand what OP is talking about, but I disagree with your diagnosis... or prognosis perhaps. Our generation definitely wastes too much time on the internet, I would never argue with that, but not all of us are deprived of meaningful social experiences. I too love LAN-ing with friends, but by far the best part of our get-togethers is what comes after that, when we sit around a fire, or in a dimly lit room and just open up. We talk for hours about everything about us, our hopes, dreams, fears, loves and if you were there, you would know that saying
Not only that, but your line
I do appreciate your input, I will think about what you said further, but I just felt that this clarification must be made. EDIT: typoSimply put, your friends haven't learned how to be friendly. None of you have.
is completely inaccurate. Now I will admit that we don't have these interactions nearly as much as we should, or would like to, but we still have them.my lofty position as Father Confessor of Reddit I get a lot of PMs. And they're invariably about someone's inability to connect or communicate with someone else.
seems to me to imply a strong selection bias on your part. I don't mean to really insult you by saying this, but I just want to know how often you interact with members of my generation outside of a setting where you are bound to see many at their lowest.
And I'm sorry but Yes, none of your peers know what to do in a crowd. Yes, if it weren't for online dating you guys would do nothing but spank it to hentai and yes, the whole "asexual" movement is related to the fact that you guys suck ass at forming a human connection with anyone you share a room with.
is quite a statement to make, one that is laughably, provably wrong.
The rest of it is prevaricating. I just spent five solid 18 hour days with a whole bunch of you. Hop to, Sparky. You're at a disadvantage. I've been your age. You've never been mine. I used to hate it when people would say "you'll understand when you're older" because I fucking understood then. But: You don't have the experience of seeing what high school was like before you were born. I do.Now I will admit that we don't have these interactions nearly as much as we should, or would like to, but we still have them.
I don't mean to really insult you by saying this, but I just want to know how often you interact with members of my generation outside of a setting where you are bound to see many at their lowest.
one that is laughably, provably wrong.
Why? The whole of his argument is "me and my friends have fun, therefore I'm going to wave my hands and assert that everything you say is incorrect because truthiness."completely inaccurate
seems to me to imply a strong selection bia
is quite a statement to make, one that is laughably, provably wrong.
I apologize for helping this descend into a personal argument instead of a group discussion. How can you say it is prevaricating? You made inaccurate blanket statements, and I called you out on it.
How would you like me to prove what I said? Can you prove what you said? (Again, I'm seriously asking.)
You are correct, and I'm old enough to have been able to begin experiencing what you said about the "understanding when you're older" effect, but that not is grounds for disregarding what I have to say. I would like to be able to have this conversation when we're the same age, but that will obviously never be the case. You distinctly made your argument out to be in reference to my entire generation, and my experiences are in contrast to your pontificating. I never asserted everything you said was wrong, I explicitly said I took issue with a few broad statements you made.
you're wrong. I don't really know what to tell you other than that I am definitely not whoever ike is. I only responded to this comment of yours instead of the previous one because I saw it while I was working on my response and figured I would just respond here to save a split discussion
Thanks a lot, kleinbl000, this is exactly what I needed to read. I have been realizing this over the last few months. It's extraordinarily hard to drag my peers away from the impersonal electronic interface. Thanks for helping me to put my finger on it. I've been trying to figure this out.
My brother-in-law once had a friend over at his house and they played Halo together, in separate rooms, over Xbox Live. It was incredibly sad but they saw nothing wrong with it. Things like that really make you reflect on your relationships with people.It was far and away the most antisocial thing we could have done. It was putting a thing between our interpersonal interactions, despite the fact that we were in the same room.
I appreciate your standpoint, but I don't believe that we cannot have fulfilling interpersonal relationships via the internet. It's just a bit different. I and others I know all communicate almost solely by relay, and even though we cannot physically be together, we can still have meaningful experiences together! These relationships are every whit as real and fulfilling as relationships I could have if I went directly to where they were and interacted with them physically. If I did go physically, it would be a gift of great value to them of course, because they know how far it is for me.
| I don't believe that we cannot have fulfilling interpersonal relationships via the internet.| Not my argument. I've been friends with a guy in Scotland since 1995. Never so much as heard his voice. Now there - there we can disagree. Come at it from the other side - you have friends that you hang out with and interact with. You eat meals with them, watch movies with them, talk about classes with them. Consider carefully: If you never saw them in person ever again, would your relationship be diminished? I don't think you can honestly say that an in-person relationship does not suffer from becoming a text-based relationship. I think it can still be a strong relationship, but it becomes a different relationship. Thus, back to the core argument: People who focus on online relationships lose some of their ability to have an in-person relationship. I would argue that your inability to distinguish between the two demonstrates my point. If I can experience a closer relationship off-line than I can online, while you can experience just as intense a relationship online as off, which is more likely: A) You experience a greater depth of connection in all things than I do B) Your ability to experience connection in person has been diminished compared to me I can make an argument for B. Can you make an argument for A?These relationships are every whit as real and fulfilling as relationships I could have if I went directly to where they were and interacted with them physically.
I don't think that you can really make an argument for either, unless you had some sort of quantitative proof of a deeper relationship. Otherwise, we wouldn't have any way to compare the depth of our relationships. As for your first point, I have a friend that I met in high school, and we hung out almost every single day during and after school. We hung out so much that our families just sort of adopted each other. In any case, he had to move to a different school after sophomore year, but even so, our friendship is still very strong because we still hang out almost every day over the internet. He is my best friend and would trump any of the friends I see from day to day in real life. The friends that I meet day to day still mean a lot to me, but they still rank below my friend that I haven't seen face to face for almost six years.
I can, in fact. It is the premise of the aforementioned MIT professor's body of work over the past 25 years. See also: Love and Sex with Robots. | our friendship is still very strong because we still hang out almost every day over the internet.| That was not the argument. The argument was that your relationship had been diminished by his moving away. I'm glad you skype every day. If you could choose to see him in person, would you? Once again, I'm saying "there is scholarly data that reflects that." You're saying "It doesn't really feel true to me that." And, once again, this is like arguing "I know you just accused me of myopia, but I don't believe there's a man standing on that hill over there."I don't think that you can really make an argument for either
Whoops, I must have missed your earlier link to his work. Perhaps my ability to make relationships has been crippled both inside and outside the sphere of the internet, but to me it doesn't make a lot of difference. All I know is my perspective, I've never experienced anything else. While you may find that regrettable, I see no difference at all. My relationships feel deep and meaningful to me, so why should I seek something different?
Again, my point. Not saying you should. However, you are posting in a thread called "The internet is wasting our lives" and I set forth a number of points why the author might feel that way. Soldier on, li'l camper. But also recognize that when someone explains why someone else feels empty inside, "but personally, I don't feel empty therefore your answers are wrong" is not a valid tactic of debate.All I know is my perspective, I've never experienced anything else
My relationships feel deep and meaningful to me, so why should I seek something different?
It's still possible to do worthwhile things on the internet, it's just many people choose not to do so. I don't use Reddit as much anymore, I use Hubski because the articles have thought put into them. Aside from that, I use the internet to find new music and figure out ways to physically acquire it, as well as managing a music blog. That's something I wouldn't easily be able to outside of the internet, and the same goes for finding and trying recipes. Doing thing in real life is generally much more worthwhile and I agree with just about everything you said, but it's still possible to do things that are not a complete waste.
I agree with most of what has been said already in this post and I've been in much the same situation for years now. I've coasted through high school while playing video games and wasting my time. Fortunately a lot of my wasted time was on text-based MUDs, so at least I worked on my keyboarding. I've even spent most of my college career doing only what's needed and spent most of my excess energy on MMOs and MTG. I've wished that I had better discipline, or habits, or something as I'd piss away hours reading reddit. I believe now I have finally reached a point where my time on the internet has begun to shift to be more productive than wasted. It wasn't easy to get here and my reason for change is rather domain specific. I found something that was relevant to a skill I wanted to train, that I enjoyed doing, and that brought short term fulfilment with the promise of greater long-term fulfilment. For me it was working on the Hubski Enhancement Suite. Javascript makes it so easy to hack something simple and Hubski is the only online community I've been involved with for longer than a few months, so it made sense. Seeing what I was capable of and something to aspire to (Reddit Enhancement Suite) gave me a clear path. Now I see all my friends spending their time (and hogging the network) playing MOBAs at school and I'm more pumped to check out the new Xamarin release. My wife has had a similar journey with her art. She started by making fan art on deviantArt but she didn't like the community there. One of her friends was a furry and invited her to make an account on a furry art site. She found that the people she met there were more supportive of her as an artist and moved beyond simple fan art. Now she gets paid to make things like animated avatars and character reference sheets. She even has contacts in some of the animation studios in Vancouver. Overall, I think kleinbl00 said it best. The internet is what you make of it.
Copy and pasted from my comment in response to your original comment with a bit more When I was in school we didn't spend that much time online. We did play a ton of vide games though. Mostly EA sports games though and that was usually against a roommate, so it was a social thing. We'd have tournaments, usually while playing NHL but there would be all of us roommates (4 of us) around drinking beer and playing video games. Then around 10 we'd go out to the bars.
If I had had the Internet back then I don't know if it would have made that big of a difference. I probably would have known more people and been more aware of where the party was that night, that's all.
It's a good idea to get rid of behaviors that you think aren't contributing to your happiness though. Good luck with it ike. Also keep in mind though that every past generation seems like they "had it better". I bet you end up leaving your collegiate experience with some pretty great memories and even friends. These things just tend to burn a bit brighter in the rearview mirror. -unfortunately. George Bernard Shaw said, "youth is wasted on the young". I don't want to sound like an old fart, cause I'm not dammit! But, he does have a point. It's a shame that most people don't realize what I think you are realizing until they are older. That time is precious and isn't something to be frivolously used. Now GET OFF MY LAWN and go have some fun dammit!
One of these days you will be loading up your favorite waste of time, look at it and go "no, I've got this other thing to do." Its not that productive tasks are boring or unrewarding, its that you, in all likelihood, don't find the material all that interesting. Hence the internet. Its not that the content on the web is low-effort, low-reward, its that the content on the web is a thing to do. Its mental snacking; you're bored, so you snack. I've had this issue too and I'm starting to really get off it. I look at a lot of sites now and they've become boring, and the way I've accomplished this is by doing things that I find interesting, whether that's video projects with friends, directing scenes for director's lab, working on tabletop systems that'll probably go no where, or just doing something I find entertaining. But its not really the internet's fault, you just need to find something you love to do, and then do something new with it, even if its dumb. Like playing piano? Write your own music. Already writing your own music? Make an album, cover songs, start a band. Never keep the envelope on the desk. I've been working on always trying to push that, and I've found I've been happier, more productive at home and work, and generally a less stressed person. Once you find the thing you love to do, then the rest will be a lot easier. Humans are really good about that "meaning" thing that we all like to have, and giving your life meaning through a task is an easy way to get it organized. Speaking of which, I've got shit to do before work.
it doesn't teach me anything
I was really shocked when i read this! With all the information available on the web (news, wikipedia, youtube how to videos, tutorials, blogs....) it is so easy to learn! There are so many things out there that I would have never been introduced to if it was not for the internet.
I hear you. I spend way too much time online, and playing video games, and (not as much these days) masturbating to pornography. It's funny, though, in terms of causality. I think I developed a habit of procrastinating and shying away from the things I have to do, and so that is what caused me to get into heavy internet use and video gaming, and yet it works the other way, too, in that those things become causes unto themselves and make me waste yet more time. It's a vicious cycle! It's actually interesting, this kind of feedback loop rather than a linear causal relationship. I think it's related to my 'depression' (I'm not clinically diagnosed and am anyway wary of the term). I hate myself because I do nothing, and I do nothing because I hate myself too much. It makes no sense, but it's something the depressed people I've spoken to understand completely. And so I, too, am scared of the future. I'm scared because I'm not sure I can deal with life, and because I might end up wasting it. It's desperate. I spend every waking moment - other than when I distract myself - screaming in my mind at all I have not done and have left to do. The thing is, simple removal of distractions doesn't get me anywhere. I will literally sleep rather than do stuff. I've actually been sleeping a crazy amount lately...
simple removal of distractions doesn't get me anywhere.
What has worked in the past to get you to do something you wanted to do or had to do? For example, you're obviously a good writer (error-free, in paragraphs! don't see that often). You must have done some writing in your time.
What usually works is the deadline hitting my face like a brick wall, hah!
You don't sound trite, at all. My only response is that I know that. I know it because it runs through my head every minute of the day.