Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Too much of a good thing

Amidst your toys, you still go for Mommy and Daddy's mobile phones on the bed. When you see us changing channels with the remote control, you stop bobbing your head to Mickey's Hotdog Dance and reach for that magical contraption that changes the Disney Junior channel to one of Daddy's preferred shows. We keep telling you it's not a toy, but you reach for them anyway because you see us using them. With your developing brain, you already know these gadgets are important to us and you are probably wondering what makes them important and maybe it can be important to you too.

Technology is a wonderful thing. With Facebook, I can share your photos and videos for the whole family to see. No more having the photos developed, no more having to wait for the photos to arrive when they are sent through mail. Mobile phones now connect to the Internet and everybody is just a click away from anybody. It's perfect for emergencies and I love it.

But then again, it's the very thing that keeps people apart too. In a restaurant, you'd see people in the same table clicking away on their phones and tablets all at the same time. They're not talking, but from their Facebook pages, the whole world knows where they "checked in", what they are eating, wearing, and who they are with, showing people they are having a good time. But in actuality, are they really having a good time, or just more concerned about "looking like" they are having a good time? Sheesh. Humans can really be pathetic at times, honey. Too bad you're part of it too.

Nowadays, people don't start eating UNTIL they take a photo of their plate. It's sooo annoying. It seems to have replaced saying grace. I hope you don't get into that habit. Because you go out to spend time with family and friends and partake of a delicious meal. The memories you create from these encounters will be forever ingrained in your head, all because it's pleasant and it's happy. Sure, photos will help you relive them in the future, but they're just an added bonus, an icing on the cake if you put it that way.

In all honesty, nobody really cares where you eat and what you eat. Your Daddy and I care about what you eat because you don't know any better. When you're older, you should care about what you eat for your health and well-being. I know some people like snooping in other people's lives, just because they have nothing better to do, or they're insecure that their lives are worse than others. Or maybe, just maybe, they're too full of themselves that they love other people snooping into their lives. That's why they have to create this impression that they are worthy of being snooped at.

There's this celebrity I read in some showbiz magazine who was talking about her toddler son who plays games on her iPad. She kept on raving about how good her son was because he learned to swipe and tap the screen. And there's this viral video of a toddler girl who was holding a magazine and she didn't know what to do with it. She was swiping the pages with her finger and is probably wondering why the screen doesn't change. I pity these children, really. And I will not be the least entertained if you learn to swipe and tap on our phones.

Developmentally speaking, these actions don't do anything for children as young as you. One educator states that fine motor skills develop when the fingers are made to move. Swiping and tapping touchscreens are actions that you can actually make with your elbow, nose, knees and forehead even. Touching an actual book, gripping and turning its pages and covers is what strengthens your chubby-wubby fingers. In time, I will let you hold crayons and pencils, and you will realize what a joy it is to draw and write, far more fulfilling than tapping with your finger. Unless you want to make a musical beat, of course.

Back to that celebrity with the iPad. A child who engages so much in gadgets can only mean that he doesn't get into much interaction and play from parents and adult caregivers. What does that tell us? That parents and caregivers (me included) realistically resort to gadgets to get you children out of our hair even for a little while. Yes I am guilty of that too, because I am no model parent who shuns technology for your sake. Technology will always be a part of our lives - its advantages we reap, its disadvantages we learn to control before it controls us.

With that said, I make a promise to you, my darling Georgia. I promise that when you are awake and need all my attention for whatever reason, I will gladly give it to you. The computer and the mobile phone will only be used when it's very important, or when you're asleep and you don't need me as much. As for the TV, I will keep your viewing to a minimum and have you get used to reading your books instead (if only you would stay in your playpen for a longer period). I apologize in advance if I find the need to update this blog or attend to my many games just because I want to. But I'll try very hard to fill your childhood with fond memories of you and Mommy and Daddy together.

2 comments:

  1. she was swiping the pages with her finger and is probably wondering why the screen doesn't change. -- omygosh, totoo ba to?!

    so true, technology (plus social networking) these days is becoming more of unhealthy rather than an advantage. Im starting to get annoyed too with people who take pics of their foods, dahil wala lang. minsan kahit simpleng taho or donut lang ppicturan, just for the self gratification they get when others LIKE what they just ate diba. grabe!

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    1. yup, i dunno how to search for it on youtube nga lang. anyway, i would understand if people take photos of their food if it really looks like a work of art from a nice restaurant. pero kung every meal na lang may picture, kulang na sa pansin yun at kelangan na i-hide sa news feed mga posts nya hahaha!

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