Oof. Wednesday night was hard. Unplugged night started at 5pm Eastern, when I boarded a plane in New York heading home from a super intense day. Predictably, it’s always hardest for me to unplug when there’s all sorts of shit going on online.
And at 5pm EST on Wednesday, there was a lot going on … nothing like a national television appearance to fill your inbox. I was fielding emails from friends and family with lots of questions, calls from my lit agent, comments on various blogs, and just to ensure I REALLY didn’t want to unplug, even a hurt email from a colleague that I wanted to take some time to respond to, but zoinks: there went the plug. Everything would have to wait.
I spent the first half of the flight home finishing Twilight. Once I finished the book, I still had almost two hours to kill and not one but TWO fully charged laptops in my carry-on luggage. Usually, when I’m coming home from a trip, I like to do a written brain-dump to get what happened out of my head and onto the page where I can contextualize it and figure out what just happened to me by reading it back to myself. (I still haven’t decided if this is neurotic or just the earmark of someone who’s journaled for most of their life — take your pick!)
But of course then I remembered it was unplugged night. So I scribbled notes to myself on paper and re-read my favorite chapter of Twilight and stared at the air. Hmm. So air-like.
Upon landing in Seattle, I told myself I could make one cell call to Ellen, to coordinate picking up Sassafras. But evidently the technology gods wanted me to stay unplugged, and my Sidekick refused to turn on. So I used a pay phone — uh, weird? I’m not germ phobic at all, but rubbing a public piece of plastic on my face was distinctly icky to me.
Once I was home, things got harder. Part of how I unwind from a trip is by throwing down my bags and immediately uploading my photos from my camera. I’ll spend hours happily processing my pictures and then sticking them on Flickr … I like getting my photos up as quickly as I can, as yet another way to process the trip and immediately share it with friends. This often means that my suitcases will sit half-unpacked for days — sometimes even weeks. Posting photos is way more entertaining than unpacking and doing laundry.
Being unplugged meant that, perhaps for the first time ever, I came home and immediately unpacked. I spent a lot of the evening fretting over all the stuff that was waiting for me online, but at the same time enjoying a sense of relief that there was simply nothing I could do about it. To say I came home from New York feeling anxious would be an understatement — I came home feeling squeezed dry, tapped out, run over, and otherwise used up.
I had trouble sleeping that night, and when I woke up yesterday, I found that technology was conspiring to keep me semi-unplugged … my phone has been on the fritz since I got home (randomly shutting itself off, sending calls straight to voicemail instead of ringing) and yesterday the internet at my house went down for 6 hours.
One nice side effect of unplugging? Normally these technical difficulties would send me into a complete tailspin. As it was, I just shrugged, took a bath, and fell asleep. I think I’ll deem that a successful side effect.
Hey there. I'm Ariel Meadow Stallings, a native Seattleite who's written my way up and down the Left Coast. Electrolicious is where I post daily randomata, but I also write for a living. My first book, Offbeat Bride, was published last year.
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kiala
February 22nd, 2008 at 9:35 am
I just could not do it. Even reading about you doing it makes me freak out vaguely.
In fact, I can’t even get through writing a 75 word film review without stopping to look at blogs and check my email 4 or 600 million times.
I don’t know what’s happened to me. I still had an answering machine and a vcr up until last year.
I’m a cylon aren’t I?
Kell
February 22nd, 2008 at 10:19 am
I missed the Today show, which was ironic because it’s my background noise almost every morning while I’m getting ready, doing chores. (I had to be at the DMV early, ugh.) So it was really weird when I’m home at noon eating my brown rice and broccoli (being oh so healthy) and all of the sudden right when I turn on the news there’s you and Sassy. It guess King 5 did a piece on you too? I didn’t see you mention it anywhere but maybe I missed it. \
Texting and driving?! *bad Ariel*
Ariel
February 22nd, 2008 at 10:23 am
Kell, I’m assuming maybe King 5 just re-aired the Today Show segment, since it was local? I’m not sure … I didn’t know anything about it!
amy.leblanc
February 22nd, 2008 at 4:11 pm
so no swapping unplugged nights allowed, huh?
b
February 22nd, 2008 at 5:43 pm
that was my first thought: can you switch nights? i’ve been thinking about trying to unplug for a night since you started writing about it, but haven’t been able to commit (unsurprisingly).
and congrats on your recent successes, woman! that today show thang is awesome.
Ariel
February 22nd, 2008 at 9:03 pm
I could switch nights, but I know myself and if I start fiddling with my routine the whole thing will fall apart.
sara
February 24th, 2008 at 5:58 pm
one thought that occurred to me during all this - if you just push off doing all the things you would have been doing on unplugged day to the next day, are you really reducing your usage? and if you are unable to do things that relax and enrich, like journaling about your experiences, is that really even a good thing?
just thoughts! makes me wonder if there is a more productive way to reduce your dependence on technology.
sam
February 24th, 2008 at 6:06 pm
This is nice to hear - I too freak out (which of course is apparently a huge problem for most people as well), so being able to take technical difficulties like that sounds like a great side effect!
Ariel
February 24th, 2008 at 9:03 pm
Sara, this is actually something I’ve been thinking a lot about — my one night a week is a nice focal point but I’m becoming increasingly aware that it’s like going vegetarian: you can’t just abstain. You have to change your entire diet. I’m working on trying to be more mindful of my technology use the rest of the week … and finding ways to relax and enrich other than tech.
So far, so good….