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How Your Phone Is Robbing You of You

When a silent moment arrived, rather than exploring the world happening within me, I reached for my phone and dove into the world within it.
Credit : People look at smartphones of Chinese brand Lenovo at a shop in Kenya's capital Nairobi September 2, 2015.
People look at smartphones of Chinese brand Lenovo at a shop in Kenya's capital Nairobi September 2, 2015.

My son is waiting by the road for his ride to school.

I remember being 14 and waiting for my ride to school. Sometimes, I would try to walk the balance beam of railroad ties separating our yard from the shoulder of the road. But I bored of that quickly. Then, I would pass the time walking into myself. I'd think thoughts. Feel feelings. Wonder about who I was and where I was going. Daydream of dating girls who were way out of my league. Worry that my daydreaming was a sin. In other words, I'd wander into my humanity.

My son is waiting by the road for his ride to school.

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He's not walking railroad ties. But even more importantly, he's not walking into himself. He's not wandering into the infinite abyss of his humanity. Rather, he's wandering into the infinite abyss of something else. His head is down. His right arm is raised. He's on his phone. Rather than venturing into his interior world, he's venturing into his digital world.

This is tragic.

I know that sounds a little alarmist. And I know I sound like an out-of-touch old man, pining for the good ole days of an analog world. But the truth is, I think it's tragic not because my son is different than me, but because he is like me. For much of the last year, I got lost in my phone. When a silent moment arrived, rather than exploring the world happening within me, I reached for my phone and dove into the world within it.

Again, this is tragic.

It's tragic because we are here to discover ourselves. We are here to wade into all the mess that exists just beneath our carefully crafted facades. We are here to have a reckoning with our arrogance. We are here to understand the roots of our rage. We are here to befriend our fear. We are here to sit with our sorrow. We are here to silence our shame.

We are here to wade into our mess until that moment, that graceful moment, when we've waded far enough to finally catch a glimpse of what lies on the other side: our true self. Our soul. God, love, grace and mercy and every beautiful thing, residing right there, at the center of us.

My son's head is bowed and his phone is raised and this is tragic, because in any moment, there are two infinite journeys you might embark upon—the journey into your phone, or the journey into you. The architects of your phone have designed it so you will become addicted to the digital journey. They are robbing you of you.

The architect of your soul is much less manipulative.

The only incentive for the journey into you is delight. The delight that arises from discovering that you are good enough and worthy, just the way you are. The delight that arises from discovering you are not alone, never have been, and never will be. The delight that arises from discovering that you matter, that there's a reason for your life, that it's all heading somewhere.

I've been detoxing from my phone and becoming intoxicated, once again, with this journey into me. As a therapist, I can tell you this is the most powerful thing a therapy room has to offer—the space to enter into yourself.

As a parent, I want to tell my son that's the most powerful thing a roadside has to offer, as well.

Dr. Kelly Flanagan is an author, speaker, podcaster, licensed clinical psychologist, and co-founder of Artisan Clinical Associates in Naperville, IL. He blogs regularly at drkellyflanagan.com. His writing has been featured in Reader's Digest, and he has appeared on the TODAY Show and Focus on the Family. In 2017, Kelly published Loveable: Embracing What Is Truest About You, So You Can Truly Embrace Your Life, and it debuted as the #1 New Release in Interpersonal Relations on Amazon. Kelly is married to another clinical psychologist named Kelly, and they have three children who are in eighth, fourth, and second grade.

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