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The value of solitude

By: christen beck

Issue date: 4/20/09 Section: Opinion
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Blank pages are scary no matter how much you write. And so, in preparation of written expression, I surround myself with the necessary equipment to make the experience as painless as possible: crappy Dell laptop ("Napoleon") - check. iPod - check. Instant messenger - check. Facebook - check. Cell phone - check.

I'm surrounded by sidekicks. These tools of communication my generation depends upon invade my daily life, and I now realize there's something oddly perverse about how meager machinery overwhelms us.

The convenience of technology creates an interconnected, global world. But through this, our society loses an element past generations considered a value: solitude.

The voices from the radio fill a silent room. Walking to class is accomplished while listening to an iPod. Some find sleep impossible without the aid of a TV's buzzing glare. As I ride the bus and watch other passengers energetically text (or fake text) on their Crackberrys and iPhones, it is evident I'm not the only one afflicted.

We're never alone. Over the last several decades, we've become terrified by the notion.

We tag ourselves in pictures on Facebook, as if to scream out, "Look, I have fun! I am visible!" Perhaps visibility is exactly what we seek in this technology-apt world.

William Deresiewicz, writer for The Chronicle of Higher Education, elaborated on this issue in his article "The End of Solitude."

Deresiewicz writes, "[t]he great contemporary terror is anonymity… if the property that grounded the self, in Romanticism, was sincerity, and in modernism it was authenticity, then in postmodernism it is visibility."

Every individual naturally desires to be the main character of their story. Once we mailed handwritten letters to our loved ones to share life's narrative. Black ink marks stained an avid letter writer's

fingertips. Now, our existence is recognized by the hundreds of Twitter followers or Facebook friends.
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