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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsI left my phone at home and feel totally lost at work now. How did we ever survive w/o cell phones?
I guess this means I'm going to have to spend my time at work doing actual work now. How am I ever going to make it 8 hours without checking facebook and playing app games??
Denninmi
(6,581 posts)It really is an addiction, isn't it?
Stay strong.
HopeHoops
(47,675 posts)RebelOne
(30,947 posts)when I am going to be out on the road. The main reason I have it is for emergencies on the road.
HopeHoops
(47,675 posts)bluedigger
(17,086 posts)pipi_k
(21,020 posts)If someone had told me back 30 or 40....even only 20 years ago that I'd be using things like an iPhone...microwave oven...laptop and notebook computers...online banking, etc., I would have said "No way".
If told that I would not only use them but become virtually addicted, I would have laughed in that person's face.
Yet here I am. Using them. Addicted to them. And wondering how I ever got along without them.
Well, the answer to that is, you can't miss what you don't have and what you didn't know.
Anyway, I am paranoid about leaving the house without my cell phone. Not for the games and apps, but because there's a lot of uninhabited space out here and going off the road or getting stuck without contact would not be a good thing.
yellowcanine
(35,699 posts)There is help for you. But first you have to admit you need help and reach out.
jakeXT
(10,575 posts)turtlerescue1
(1,013 posts)The Ozark Mtns community I live in-cells don't work. No tower close enough, Mayor's trying to get that changed, but NOT for what it may seem. Year ago, or so?, we had a group of teens out on the lake on a party barge, one went missing in the lake, these kids were sure they cells would work, only they didn't. A real tragedy. So we're awaiting a tower being erected here or across the lake in Missouri.
I gave up my cell, by the time I drove far enough to get cell service, might as well drive the rest of the way to the nearest large town. I do miss not being able to take pictures! But then that's why I now am online. Of course that means back to being addicted to being online....trade one addiction for another.
Gotta ask ourselves, HOW MUCH do we really NEED? We may learn it is a lot less than we have grown to depend upon. If Mitters gets in ALL of us in that 99% may find out how little we need to survive.
GROAN!!
yortsed snacilbuper
(7,939 posts)Back in the day,these worked like a charm!
HappyMe
(20,277 posts)Better than fine - great.
Duer 157099
(17,742 posts)and nobody wants to do that! That's the only drawback with forgetting to bring my cell to work.
Populist_Prole
(5,364 posts)For one thing there's the physical aspect. Even though it's a folding type, it feels like it may as well be a cinder block in my pocket. When I tried carrying it on a belt clip, it was always getting caught or snagged on everything as I performed my work.
The worst thing though, I mean the worst thing; the reason I no longer carry it is because my crew lead(s) or supervisors were driving me crazy. I innocently gave them my cell number so they could call me "just in case". Now the damned thing rings seemingly every time a thought pops up in one of their heads. They get all fidgety about how the job is going, "how much longer?" etc. It's like a passive form of micromanagement. Hell, I'd turn it off or leave it in my locker for 30 minutes and come back to see 5 messages from people asking the same question...people who are no more than 4 feet from each other.
Finally I just stopped carrying it. Other co-workers complain of the same thing but most of them are too into their gadgets to not carry them. Now I can work, eat dinner, even piss, in relative peace; and you know what? Things still get done, the world still turns. How 'bout that?