“On the Conan O’Brien show, C.K. explained why: “You need to
build an ability to just be yourself and not be doing something. That’s what
the phones are taking away,” he said. “Underneath in your life there’s that
thing … that forever empty … that knowledge that it’s all for nothing and
you’re alone … That’s why we text and drive … because we don’t want to be alone
for a second.”
He recalled a moment driving his car when a Bruce Springsteen
song came on the radio. It triggered a sudden, unexpected surge of sadness. He
instinctively went to pick up his phone and text as many friends as possible.
Then he changed his mind, left his phone where it was, and pulled over to the
side of the road to weep. He allowed himself for once to be alone with his
feelings, to be overwhelmed by them, to experience them with no instant
distraction, no digital assist. And then he was able to discover, in a manner
now remote from most of us, the relief of crawling out of the hole of misery by
himself. For if there is no dark night of the soul anymore that isn’t lit with
the flicker of the screen, then there is no morning of hopefulness either. As
he said of the distracted modern world we now live in: “You never feel
completely sad or completely happy, you just feel … kinda satisfied with your
products. And then you die. So that’s why I don’t want to get a phone for my
kids.”
Andrew Sullivan, “I Used to Be a Human Being.” New York Magazine. 20 Sep. 2016
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