Metalwolf wrote:
Aspies have done it, and I think I would like to heavily limit it for myself. I miss the days when there wasn't this emphasis on it like it there is now, and I lived up to my late teens without a computer (I didn't get on the Internet until about 2005.)
It is nice for Aspies, but there is a point where it starts to suck you in as well. I don't do as much 'outside' stuff as I used to, and I think that's a bad thing. It isolates and distracts, not really allowing people to connect with each other in a human way, nor does it allow a person to interact with nature, because that screen and it's info is like a siren call.
If I was on the Internet from a young age, I would never have been forced to interact with real people and learn the hard way their body language, I would still be 'underdeveloped' because the screen would be a comforting 'cocoon' that would be hard to draw away from.
Internet isn't good or bad, but it's become a draw for many people, with it's endless 'flow' of information and it's ersatz interactions through some type and a screen. I don't want to be that way, I like the Internet in some degree but I hate that it's taking up more of my free time then I want.
I agree. Growing up before the Internet was available enabled me to explore the great outdoors. I did not interact with many people outside my immediate family, but at least I watched other people interact in real life, and not only in staged interactions on screen.
Children growing up now in a way have it much harder, as they are sucked into Internet mediated torrents of information even before starting school. I see the challenges my son is facing. He gets out of the house every day, but the internet is always top of mind. We recently went on a holiday, and pull of the Internet could be measured in the intensity of the search for WiFi connectivity.