I confess that I do not own
an I Phone. In fact, I don’t own an I Anything. I know; I know. I am so out of the loop---as obsolete as a
four-on-the-floor, stick-shift car. But there we are.
The phone could happen; I
think it probably should happen. It
just hasn’t. I do have an old, fold-over cell phone for emergency purposes—in
case I should drive into a snow bank and need help. It works fine.
Although I am not at all interested in
“selfies,” it might be nice to have one of those phones that does just about
everything but empty the dishwasher.
Still, I am cautious. Recently a much-younger
friend told me that she often finds herself trying to remember the name of
something and, unable to do so, she immediately reaches for her cell phone.
“It has become a part of me,
an extension of myself,” she told me, “I don’t have to remember anything
anymore; I just grab my phone. My phone is
my memory,” she said, her voice shaded with concern.
I got to thinking about that.
What happens to those neural-pathways in the brain that we are supposed to keep
free of cobwebs? I’ve already got some of those pathways going flimsy on me
even without a cell phone. If we don’t use our memory, insist that it drag
information up from its depths, will those pathways become even more narrow and
rigid than we might normally expect? If
we don’t use our memory, will we lose it?
Long term—I am thinking of
evolution here--will the parts of the human brain that store and retrieve
memory shrivel from lack of use? The way the invention of fire eliminated the
need for hair on our bodies? Because smart phones haven’t been around all that
long, I suspect the impact of these phones on memory function has only begun to
be imagined, much less analyzed.
I’m in favor of creating new neural-pathways whenever we can.
Breaking up our patterns. Taking a different route to the grocery store,
brushing our teeth with our left hand if our right is the usual choice, saying,
“yes” to something benign that we have habitually said “no” to--acquiring any new
skill.
I am no scientist but I can
tell you this: when the day comes that I do buy a smart phone, while I am
learning how to use it, I know I will be blasting new neural-pathways through
my brain—or at least awakening flabby ones--and I will be grateful.
I will also make every effort
not to surrender my memory to that phone.