 Next year, for the first time, “Internet use disorder” will be listed  in the appendix of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental  Disorders.
Next year, for the first time, “Internet use disorder” will be listed  in the appendix of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental  Disorders.
“The latest trend on the Internet,” said Tracy McVeigh in The U.K. Observer, “is to step away from the Internet.” With smartphones, tablets, and other digital devices  reshaping how people work, communicate, and spend their free time,  scientists and psychologists are starting to question what our reliance  on these devices is doing to our minds.
 Next year, for the first time, “Internet use disorder” will be listed  in the appendix of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental  Disorders, said Matt Richtel in The New York Times. Even in Silicon Valley, there is a growing concern that technology  is taking over people’s lives. “We’re done with this honeymoon phase,  and now we’re in a phase that says, ‘Wow, what have we done?’” says tech  guru Soren Gordhamer, who has organized an annual conference of  digerati called Wisdom 2.0 to explore the need for balance in a wired world.
 Companies like 
Google, 
Facebook, and 
Twitter are now teaching their own employees meditation and “mindfulness,” and warning them of the dangers of constant 
texting, 
tweeting, and 
web-
surfing.  “It’s this basic cultural recognition that people have a pathological  relationship with their devices,” says Stanford University psychologist  Kelly McGonigal, who consults with tech company executives. “People feel  not just addicted, but trapped.”
Don’t blame the 
gadgets, said Alexis Madrigal in 
TheAtlantic.com. It’s not your smartphone’s fault that you compulsively check your 
email “at a stoplight, at the dinner table, in bed.” It’s mostly the fault of our employers, who now expect workers to be available 
24/7.  We can also blame the “strange American political and cultural systems”  that make us feel guilty about taking any time off, and obligated to  meet the growing demand for nonstop productivity. People have 
iPhones  in Britain and Germany, too, yet “Americans now put in an average of  122 more hours per year than Brits, and 378 hours (nearly 10 weeks!)  more than Germans.”
Beware: We’re already paying a steep price for our digital obsession, said Tony Dokoupil in 
Newsweek.  Research shows that constant use of these devices is actually rewiring  the physical structure of people’s brains. Every time your phone,  tablet, or computer pings with a new text, tweet, or email, it triggers a  sense of expectation, and the reward centers in your brain receive a  pleasurable “squirt of dopamine.” Over time, a brain habituated to these  quick fixes shrinks the structures used for concentration, empathy, and  impulse control, while growing new neurons receptive to speedy  processing and instant gratification. Brain scans of Internet  addicts—defined as anyone online more than 38 hours a week—can resemble  those of cocaine addicts and alcoholics. Symptoms of 
Internet addiction can range from depression to acute psychosis. The Internet, in other words, is “driving us mad.”
I know of a good treatment, if not a cure, said Nicholas Kristof in 
The New York Times.  It’s called nature. When we get into the great outdoors, the illusion  of control that technology provides disappears, and we are “deflated,  humbled, and awed all at once.” In the “vast natural cathedral,” we are  reminded of a world much larger than ourselves—one that predates us,  will outlive us, and at whose mercy we exist. To escape our  “post-industrial self-absorption,” we all need to leave our iPhones at  home at least once a week, and go take a walk in the woods. Your devices  will be waiting when you get back, and you’ll be a bit saner when you  rejoin the endless conversation.
- As seen in The Week
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