He retired to the
kitchen with a box of old family photos…..Photos were ruthless. They showed moments lost for ever, people
long since dead. They were an attempt to
cheat death, a painful illusion, and looking at them made one more aware than
ever that time was a mystery.
After looking at them
all one by one, he closed the box of memories with a sigh.”
Perhaps, indeed, people’s recent mania for the constant
taking of photos, usually of themselves, rather than giving themselves time to
observe life at first-hand through their own eyes, is part of an attempt to
”cheat death”, to re-assure ourselves that we are alive. I observe with some incredulity and much sadness
this endless taking of photos, the living of life at one remove which this
represents. So many pieces of electronic
equipment, such as smart phones with their numerous gadgets, now put a barrier
up between people and the world around them.
I wonder what effect this is having on our personal relationships.
I was also saddened recently to hear that, far from
connecting people to one another, as Facebook is intended to do, it can have
just the opposite effect, that of isolating people. I have been told that young girls can now
spend hours alone in their rooms taking photo upon photo of themselves until
they are satisfied with the one they eventually feel is good enough to send out
to the world as their image of themselves.
This is more a case of a disconnect from the world rather than a closer
connection to it.
No comments:
Post a Comment