Each night, away from the din of 24 feeds and news cycles and the
idle chatter that surrounds us, my husband and I are working to rediscover some
piece of the sacred and not yet lost art of communicating with each other
without interruption.
For a while now we have been trying to enforce a pretty
simple rule we established for each other: no phones in the bedroom. There is
all kinds of science and data that reinforce why this makes sense in terms of
falling and landing in a generally more substantial and satisfying mode of REM.
But even if we didn’t know about all of those studies there are all of the more
obvious reasons why we should: because even if we silence all notifications it
is nearly impossible to resist the lure of possible work emails, because it is a
rabbit hole time suck, or because it inevitably places me in the same physical
space with my husband even though he and I are mentally in vastly different
circles with at least 400-1000 of our not so closest friends parked right
between us on the bed.
We know it makes sense for them to go.
It came up because we were having one of those conversations
that you need to have from time to time in a committed relationship. I swear if
I close my eyes we are still in our now long gone twenties and just meeting for
the first time. We were flirty and giddy, with almost no actual
responsibilities. And then it felt like we blinked and there was four moves, a
mortgage, three kids, two jobs. Somewhere along the way our idle chit chat
became more Western Union style updates – cub scouts on Wednesday. Bring home
dinner. Meeting before school. Don’t forget the flu shots. Stop. And in between
was life and none of that was bad. We were focused on the house and our kids
and careers. We were focused on not getting swallowed up by the tsunami of logistics
that comprise the very nature of day to day life. And at night, sapped of
physical and emotional strength, we would fall into bed with often one or both
of us staring into those tiny little phones looking for false hope, for the
promise of a way to unwind, somehow forgetting that was what the other person
was there for.
Back when we were first married, when our first was still an
infant, things seemed slightly less auto-pilot-y. Maybe because back then we did
not realize how desperately we would come to crave silence and the opportunity
to not answer to anyone else’s needs. Maybe back then we didn’t’ remember how
satisfying and comforting it actually was, more than the glow of our gadgets,
to lean in to each other each night. Back then we didn’t have smart phones. It
would never have occurred to us bring anything like that into our evening hours
together. It wasn’t an option so we didn’t seek it out as a distraction.
We would unwind together.
So why is it so complicated now to choose each other over
our devices? We stare into them seeking so many things: someone who accepts us
as worn, relishing the opportunity to lurk and peep through life rather than
participate. We bathe in the less complicated glow of online affection. I know
we could call each other out on our flagrant violations of arbitrary rules we
imposed on ourselves, but it feels like it would be more meaningful to have
each of us model it, and choose it. To choose the intoxication of real human
warmth and compassion, to choose each other. To consciously decide to switch
off the autopilot and feel the exhilaration and terror, the weight of our feet
on the pedal. Deciding to go nowhere or somewhere, but to do so as we decided
all those years ago one incredibly sticky July night: together.
Finally I just asked: “Why aren’t we doing this? We said we
were going to and we didn’t. Why not?”
And we both came up with lots of mostly inadequate excuses
for why we needed to keep the phones close, but not check them. What if there
is a work emergency? What if we need an alarm clock? What if we need to know
the weather? For each reason we ultimately concluded, albeit reluctantly, that
none of that stuff constituted anything worth prioritizing and that there were
legitimate ways of retrieving most of this information without smart devices
(hello old school alarm clock!). Then we talked about a podcast I’d listened to
recently featuring Sherry Turkle, the author of Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in
the Digital Age. In it she talks about how even when silenced, phones can
still create real problems when it comes to human engagement and emotional
intimacy. To be honest, there were many times that our phones were there, and
we were not on them. But what Turkle argues is that this detail doesn’t matter.
The very presence of the phone suggest to the other person, I am ready at any
moment to opt out of being here with you for something better. Subsequently, we
never fully engage with each other in way that is particularly meaningful. I
know she’s right. Even when we’re not on them, we feel them. They had to go.
So we agreed to it. And my phone now sleeps with the fishes.
Literally. It sleeps next to the fish tanks in the kitchen. Phil’s phone lives
downstairs by the printer. And the other night we spent our first full night in
a while completely phone free. Not surprisingly, we literally missed absolutely
nothing of vital importance. We lay in bed together and Phil watched the Mets
and I read my book with my head on his chest and honestly, I’m not just saying
this. It was nice. And weirdly, I was way less anxious. Because I completely
lacked the impulse to turn over and check something. Maybe that’s my own issue
with self-control. But honestly ask yourself, how many times do you check that
thing each day, each hour, each minute? How much time is there in your day for
white space, the opportunity to just let your mind wander or, of equal
importance, to let your heart wander, without fear of getting interrupted or
overshadowed by an unsuspecting ping?
It occurred to me the other day that right now, my husband and I are
truly in the middle. Ten years ago we were planning our wedding. And ten years
from now, we'll be planning our son’s graduation from high school. And right
here, at these sacred crossroads, is the middle, where things can sometimes
feel monotonous in a way that is equal parts comforting and unsettling. We need
these precious evening hours together. Here in this autumn of our lives,
we are grateful for the opportunity to remind ourselves of the vibrancy and
randomness of our own thoughts and hearts, and to find a soft place to land in
each other.
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