Digital
Essay
The
Internet and Me
The Internet is something that affects the
entire world. It brings people together, as well as keeps
them apart. It helps people stay in touch over long distances.
It aids in the exchange of information. But it can also
be seen as a mental addiction that somewhat inhibits human
contact. It becomes an addiction through our constant usage
of the tool. Most people deal with the Internet several
times every day. We do it because we have to and because
we want to. Though I’d like not to admit it, the Internet
has affected the way I write, read, and even the way I think.
For
the most part, my Internet activity is made up of checking
email, chatting on instant messenger, and reading posts
on websites my friends have created. If I am near a computer,
my first thought is, “I wonder if someone wrote back?”
I do not think that the Internet is necessarily bad, but
I do think that it can become somewhat of a mental addiction.
This is not an addiction that will make me go insane if
I can’t get to a computer every six hours. I have
no overwhelming need to get back home as soon as possible
just so that I may look into my In-box. But if I am near
a computer, I want to get online.
Because of its’ wealth of information, the Internet
is labeled as something that can help people learn how to
write cover letters, cook beef stew, or build a bookshelf.
But I find that it is all a matter of how one chooses to
use this device. I believe that, in my case, my writing,
and even my very way of thinking, has been slightly affected
by my use of the Internet. I write informal emails to friends
and chat with them online. However, when I sit down to write
a paper, I find myself typing the same way I would when
talking online. I begin to use shortcuts like, “b/c”
for “because,” and I want to type, “...”
instead of simply using a period and starting a new sentence.
When I write for class, I must be sure I am not using the
shortcuts that my fingers so easily type. I have to consciously
change the way that I think in order to write properly for
most classes.
I think that my reading habits have changed as well. Because
of the many shortcuts we can use on the Internet, I find
research that I must do in the library to be tedious. I
have also grown accustomed to shorter clips of information.
Anything beyond a particular length looses my attention.
I get a headache after looking at a screen for too long,
so my body simply does not let me read for a long period
of time. Everything has become shorter, faster and more
accessible. The question is, is that a good thing?