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David Byers

ByDavid Byers, David Byers

Opinion

Addicted to technology

September 15, 2016 11:45
2 min read

Every morning, dreadfully early, I hear footsteps on the stairs and then feel a tug on my arm. "Can I watch videos on your phone?" That's always my four-year-old daughter's first question as she stands by our bed. The second follows a similar theme. "Can I watch TV BEFORE breakfast? Not after breakfast, BUT BEFORE?"

Often I refuse. Sometimes I agree, mainly to shut her up so I can get a coffee. But I can understand her obsession with my phone because I, too, am obsessed.

On a trip to France this summer, the week following the Brexit vote, my iPhone became my crack cocaine. "Boris has PULLED OUT!" I shouted to my wife, as we walked through a tranquil medieval village. On a day trip to a beautiful island, I stood with my head in my Twitter feed, ranting about Andrea Leadsom. When I wasn't reading the news, I had WhatsApp arguments about it. Then I took pictures of the view and posted them online, pretending I was having a great time, while actually feeling miserable and wound-up.

Clarissa Farr, headmistress of St Paul's girls' school, sees this kind of obsessive behaviour a great deal among parents, and she thinks it is making her pupils depressed. Last month, she said she thought more and more girls were "hiding on the internet" and failing to form real human relationships. She added that parents needed to start leading by example and get off their devices.