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Category Archives: Escapes and Pleasures

If You’ve Seen “Lincoln,” or Plan to…

14 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

" "Lincoln, " Lincoln Group of D.C., "Team of Rivals, "The Fiery Trial, Abraham Lincoln, Doris Kearn Goodwin, Eric Foner, Richard Margolies, Stephen Spielberg

(Having seen the Lincoln film, and mini-reviewed it on MillersTime, I got to wondering what folks who ‘know Lincoln’ and spend lots of time getting to know him even better would say about the film. I asked Richard Margolies, an active member of the DC Lincoln Group and one of those folks who spends a good deal of time increasing his knowledge of Lincoln, about the validity of Spielberg’s film and whether the Lincoln presented is one we can believe in. Here’s his response, with a few edits)

Abraham and Mary Todd In Context

by Richard Margolies

Spielberg’s Lincoln is masterful.  It shows our greatest leader during a few weeks in January, 1865 working to gain the passage of the Thirteenth Amendment in the House of Representatives.  It focuses on his relationships, as portrayed by Doris Kearn Goodwin’s fine study, Team of Rivals.

Yet, like the story of blind people touching parts of an elephant, it is difficult to understand the whole person from a touch.  A few examples.

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Ellen’s Pix from Brasilia

10 Monday Dec 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 4 Comments

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Brasilia, Ellen Miller Photos, Oscar Niemeyer

Brasilia and Oscar Niemeyer

by Ellen Miller

One of the 20th century’s most influential architects — Oscar Niemeyer – died last week at the age of 104.

I felt lucky that just about 3 weeks prior I got a first hand introduction to his work when I was in Brasilia, a city for which he designed nearly every major building. As one architect said on his passing, “Brasilia is not simply designed, it is choreographed.”

That’s a perfect summary of my experience — not only did the buildings and the plazas hang together, but they were nearly picture perfect. (Though I found it hard to do justice to them.)

I was in Brasilia – my first trip there, but second to Brazil within six months – to speak at Transparency International’s conference – a gathering of nearly 2,000 from nearly every country in the world. Whenever possible on these speaking trips I try to sneak away for an afternoon when I am not needed, and hire a guide to learn something I couldn’t pick up from a guidebook.

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“You Might as Well Be a Mensch”

06 Thursday Dec 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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""The Tummy Triology", "About Alice", "Deciding the Next Decider", "Dogfight", "Family Man", "Messages from My Father", "Quite Enough of Calvin Trillin", "Remembering Denny", Calvin Trillin, Politics & Prose Bookstore

Having the good fortune to live in the same city where the independent bookstore Politics & Prose is located, I stopped in last night to see and hear one of my favorite authors, humorist Calvin Trillin.

NYTimes photo

Trillin was in town to promote his latest book, Dogfight, a slim volume of his ‘deadline’ poetry (doggeralls, so to speak) about the 2012 Presidential campaign. This book is a sequel to his 2008 Deciding the Next Decider.

Lamenting that only one party had a primary fight and that he had already used up his Obama rhymes in 2008, he told the assembled (and aging) audience that he liked ‘iambic candidates,’ such as Ross Perot, John McCain, Chris Dodd, and Bob Dole. He read from his new book, mostly poking fun at Mitt Romney and the string of Republican candidates who ‘challenged’ him. He also admitted he once told Hilliary Clinton she had a bad name and was “insufficiently iambic.”  He claimed Hilliary took that as a great complement.

Mixed in with his ‘poetry’ in Dogfight are perhaps a half dozen “Pauses for Prose,” most of which I think are probably better than his poems.  In fact, generally I think his prose is much better than his verse.

But Trillin has long been a hero of mine, especially since he campaigned for making spaghetti carbonara our national dish and also admitted he didn’t like turkey and always “goes for Chinese” on Thanksgiving.

Trillin was born (1935) and grew up in Kansas City and has written for most of his life for The Nation and The New Yorker magazines. He has somehow maintained, retained, Midwestern cultural and regional values despite his living in Greenwich Village for more than 40 years. The title of this post, “You Might as Well Be a Mensch,” is his often quoted line of the advice his Kansas City father gave him.

If you don’t know Calvin Trillin and if you enjoy a dry sense of humor, mixed with self-deprecation and writings about family (specifically his two daughters, Sarah and Abigail and his wife Alice), food, and travel, you have some fun ahead.

You could start with any of these:

*About Alice

*Messages from My Father

*Family Man

*Remembering Denny

*The Tummy Trilogy (“American Fried,” “Alice, Let’s Eat,” and “Third Helpings”)

*Travels with Alice

*Quite Enough of Calvin Trillin (40 Years of Funny Stuff)

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“This Year of Living Dyingly” — Christopher Hitchens

27 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

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"Mortality", Christopher Hitchens, End of Life

I had not previously read, listened to, nor followed Christopher Hitchens, a writer whose articles appeared frequently in Vanity Fair, Slate, and the Atlantic and whose books included writings on Bill Clinton, Henry Kissinger, George Orwell, Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine and included God Is Not Great, The Portable Atheist, and Hitch-22, among others.

But when I read about his last book Mortality, I was intrigued.

This very short book (104 pages) is a compilation of the seven award-winning articles he wrote for Vanity Fair as he struggled with esophageal cancer for the last 18 months of his life (and includes a “Forward” by Graydon Carter and an informative “Afterward” by his wife Carol Blue).

Illustration by Rodrigo Corral; photograph by Mark Mahaney for The New York Times

Hitchens is neither the first nor the last to write personally about the end of life. But he has to be one of the best, at least one of the best I’ve read.

In a book that can be read in an afternoon, Hitchens uses his considerable writing talent and his honesty to give his readers not only an account of his illness and impending death but also his insights to his end of life. Specifically, he writes of the gradual loss of his two biggest assets, his voice and his pen.

Without self-pity, he also writes about his regret, his sorrow, and his anguish at having to “leave the party” before he is ready. He died in Dec. 2011 at the age of 62.

 

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Calling for Your Favorite Reads of 2012

24 Saturday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Favorite Books, MillersTime Annual List of Favorite Reads, Most Enjoyed Books in 2012

For the past three years, readers of this website have kindly sent in their choices of books they’ve particularly enjoyed over the previous 12 months. I’ve then compiled the list and posted it at the end of December in 2009, 2010, and 2011.  The result has been a list of widely varying fiction and nonfiction books that has been a useful reference for many of us.

As I ask for favorite reads this year, here are a few guidelines that may help in drawing your list and in making my compilation easy:

Continue reading »

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Two More Films to Add to Your “To See’ List

21 Wednesday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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" "The Silver Linings Playbook, "Chasing Ice", "West of Memphis, Bradley Cooper, David O. Russell, Documentary Film, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

West of Memphis *****

Another documentary that as it progresses you just keep wondering about our country.

This one is about three teenagers who are accused of the brutal murders of three young kids in West Memphis, Arkansas.  Initially, it seems as if they are guilty as charged, particularly because one of the three ‘confesses.’ They are convicted, and one of the three is sentenced to death.

Then, because of the on-going efforts of some people who don’t believe they are guilty, gradually evidence is gathered which shows that the police and the prosecutor got it all wrong.

Nevertheless, the three teenagers spend 18 years in jail as the powers that be do not want to own up to their mistake(s).

See it to learn the final outcome.

(Once you’ve seen the film, take a look at this article that brings you up-to-date on the latest details of what has happened since the documentary was made.)

 

The Silver Linings Play Book ****

Terrible title. Good film. Good acting.

After Pat Solatano (Bradley Cooper) has spent eight months in a state mental institution, his mother ‘springs’ him, and he returns home, hoping to rebuild his life and get back together with his wife.  But Pat refuses to take his medication for his bipolar condition. His family, particularly his father (Robert De Niro) who has problems of his own (OCD), hopes he will settle down and just be ‘normal.’

Enter Tiffany (Jennifer Lawrence), who is going through a difficult time herself after the death of her husband. Tiffany offers to help Pat get back in touch with his estranged wife, but for a price.

The rest you’ll have to see for yourself.

Writer/Director David O. Russell has made a romantic comedy that is filled with good performances by all of the main actors (particularly Jennifer Lawrence), some good humor, a story that surprises, and one that we’d like to believe could happen.

*                         *                         *                          *                        *

That’s it for films for now, tho we are going to see the new James Bond film tomorrow between our Peking Duck Thanksgiving preparations and the actual ‘event.’ We always see one of the ‘big’ new films on Thanksgiving afternoon and on Christmas Day. I gather some of the kinder (not the grand kinder) are also going to see the latest Twilight foolishness (one was enough for me).

Finally, I have it on reliable authority (ML) that Chasing Ice is a ‘great’ movie.


 

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Louise Erdrich: How Come I Didn’t Know About Her?

20 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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" National Book Award, "The Round House, Barbara Kingsolver, Louise Erdrich

How is it that I’d never known about Louise Erdrich?

The Louise Erdrich who just won the National Book Award. The Louise Erdrich who was a finalist for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. The Louise Erdich who has written 14 novels, seven children’s book, three books of poetry, and three non-fiction books. The Louise Erdrich who has been winning writing awards since the mid 80s, including a National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction (for Love Medicine (1984) and an O. Henry Award, for the short story “Fleur” (published in Esquire, August 1986).

It’s one thing never to have read a book by a given author. It’s whole other level not to even know about an author with the acclaim of Louise Erdrich.

I don’t know how I missed her. But I’m delighted that my friend Robin Rice, whom I first met in the Peace Corps 47 years ago and with whom I keep in touch via MillersTime, told me about Erdrich recently.

So when I was at our wonderful local independent bookstore the other day, getting a copy of Oliver Sacks’ new book Hallucinations, I happened to see Erdich’s novel The Round House in a display of the 2012 National Book Award winners.

Now I am getting acquainted with Louise Erdrich. I have read a bit about her, have watched the wonderful 2010 Bill Moyers’ interview with her (see below), and have just finished her latest book.

The setting for The Round House is on the North Dakota Ojibwe reservation, and the time period is the late 1980s.  It is the story of what happens to the Coutts family (mother, father, and son) as the result of a terrible incident that happens to Geraldine, the mother. Told largely through the eyes of the son, 13-year old Joe, the family is forever changed. As Judge Antone Coutts, the father, tries to console his wife, keep her safe, and looks for justice, Joe looks for vengance.

What follows is a detective story (of sorts), a coming of age story, a story of racial injustice, and a tragedy. In telling this story, Erdrich grabs the reader at the outset and doesn’t let go. Not a polemic, it nevertheless informs and teaches. And it is beautifully written.

In some ways, Erdrich’s The Round House reminds me of Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behavior. They each tell a story that entertains and educates. They each write about realities of contemporary life in a part of our society most of us do not know well. Both use their wonderful writing skills to create characters and stories that go beyond just entertainment. They may be writing fiction, but there is an honesty and a reality to their writing that make these stories fresh and meaningful and not easily forgotten.

Ah, I can’t wait to read more of Erdrich. But which one to read next?

If you have read other Louise Erdrich novels or writings that you have enjoyed, please let me and others know which ones you particularly liked.

If you do not know any of Erdrich’s work, you might want to start by watching and listening to the interview Bill Moyers lovingly conducted with her two years ago.

Actually, even if you know of Erdrich, still check out the interview.

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Three to See: “A Late Quartet,” “Lincoln,” & “Argo”

19 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

" "Lincoln, " "Silver linings Playbook, " Daniel Day-Lewis, " Films to See, "A Late Wuartet, Argo, Ben Affleck, Stephen Spielberg, The Sessions

A Late Quartet ****

I suspect this movie will not be easy to find nor will it be around long, which is a shame. It’s a good one.

A Late Quartet is the fictional story of the four members of the “Fugue Quartet,” a string quartet that has been together for 25 years. Now, as the one older member finds he is facing a medical problem that will require him to withdraw from the group, all hell breaks loose for the other three musicians.

Some of the ensuing problems are more realistic than others, but I found the film involving and thought provoking. Plus, the portrayal of what it is like for four artists to work together, and how that differs from life for solo artists, is a side story that is fascinating too.

Good performances from all four actors, starting with Philip Seymour Hoffman and including Christopher Walken, Imogen Poots and Wallace Shawn.

 

Lincoln *****

Despite the title, this film is not a biography (‘bio-pic’).

It is something quite different.

It’s about a short, very specific time in Lincoln’s presidency, the time leading up to and the passing in the House of Representatives  of the 13th Amendment, the outlawing of slavery. In the process of telling that story, director Spielberg gives us an absorbing and captivating portrait of the man who already has had more books written (16,000) and more movies made (300) about him than any other single individual.

The film is not perfect. I suspect Lincoln scholars will have some bones to pick with it. Also, so too will movie critics, no doubt.

But don’t let that prevent you from seeing Lincoln.

What we see is an appealing and steely acting performance by Daniel Day-Lewis who ‘inhabits’ the body of the president in such a way that you feel you are ‘there’ at a specific time in our history.

We see not only the principled Lincoln but also the crafty, political Lincoln who will do whatever he must to accomplish his goal of getting slavery outlawed before the end of the Civil War. Lincoln uses all his personal power(s) and all the power(s) of his office to accomplish this goal.

Actress Sally Fields also gives a strong performance in her portrayal of Molly, as the president refers to his wife Mary Todd.  So too do other members of the cast, particularly Tommy Lee Jones as Congressman Thaddeus Stevens, and David Strathaurn as Secretary of State William Seward, to name just the very best of a very strong cast.

Lincoln is a wordy (I mean that positively), suspenseful, and engrossing film about one slice of A. Lincoln’s presidency — his choice to end slavery before ending the Civil War.  In deciding to focus on this aspect of Lincoln’s presidency, Spielberg does what good artists, photographers, and others do when they show us just a small portion of a bigger picture.

(Note: Perhaps the best of the reviews and comments on Lincoln that I’ve seen is this column, Six Footnotes, in the current The New Yorker magazine.

 

Argo ****1/2

If you’re old enough to remember the American hostage crisis of 1979 when Iran held 52 of our Embassy employees captive for 444 days, you may have missed another aspect of that story that occurred at the same time.

I know I did.

Six American Embassy employees escaped just before the Iranians broke into our embassy. They hid in the Canadian Embassy, and the CIA was tasked to get them out of the country.

Argo is a film that tells the ‘story’ of what happened to that attempt to smuggle the six out of Iran before the Iranians realized they were there.

It’s an engrossing, captivating story, directed Ben Affleck, who is also the lead actor in the film.

*                     *                    *                    *                    *                     *

(Note:  Our Sunday morning Cinema Club gave the film The Sessions a positive rating {Excellent or Good} of 97.5, an extremely high rating for this group of Sunday morning film lovers.  For Silver Linings Playbook, the group’s positive rating was 89.4%.

I too thought The Sessions was outstanding – reviewed on MillersTime 10/23/12 and ‘revisted’ on 10/29/12.

My mini-reviews of The Silver Linings Playbook and a new documentary, West Memphis, will be coming soon.)

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“Rage, rage against the dying of the light”

16 Friday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Barbara Kingsolver, Beyond the Beautful Forevers, Flight Behavior, Katherine Boo

One woman:  Dellarobia.

One family: The Turnbows

One small town: Feathertown, TN

Fifteen million butterflies.

And so Barbara Kingsolver sets out to tell a story that both entertains and informs.

A scientist by her education and training and a writer by profession, Kingsolver takes on hard tasks in her writing.  She always seems to be pushing to create something new.

In Flight Behavior, her latest novel (she’s published 14 books, nine of them novels), she tells the story of Dellarobia Turnbow, wife, mother, daughter-in-law, friend, and lost soul, until something startling happens that gradually results in her emergence from her frustrating life.

Continue reading »

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Ai Weiwei: Today’s Most Powerful Artist?

01 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Ai Weiwei, The Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, The Hirshhorn Museum, The Smithsonian Magazine

I know next to nothing about contemporary art.

And that might be giving myself too much credit.

Probably the last period in art that I understood was the Impressionists.  Since then, I’m clueless.

That is by way of introduction and warning to today’s post about an exhibit at Washington, DC’s Hirshhorn Museum.

My sister-in-law was in DC recently, and I hold her responsible, and thank her, for getting me to this exhibit:  Ai Weiwei – According to What?

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Join Me to See/Hear Barbara Kingsolver

01 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Barbara Kingsolver, Favorite Author, Flight Behavior

 

 

Good news:

Barbara Kingsolver has a new novel, Flight Behavior, which will be published Nov. 6, 2012.

More good news:

She is appearing as part of Politics and Prose’s authors series. On Nov. 8 she will speak in DC at Washington National Cathedral at 7:30 PM.

And even more good news:

I have three extra tickets for folks to join me.  Let me know by leaving a Comment below or by sending me an email: Samesty84@gmail.com.  I will be away from Nov. 2-6 (canvasing for you-know-who), but I should have access to both MillersTime and my email and will let you know if one of the three free tickets is yours.

Kingsolver is one of my favorite living authors, in part because she is willing to try very different things in her writing. Think of The Bean Trees, Animal Dreams, The Poisonwood Bible, Prodigal Summer, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle, and The Lacuna. And those are just the ones I’ve read. Including Flight Behavior, she has now published 14 books.

Let me know if you want to join me.

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Flounder Four Ways – “Immediate Cuisine”

31 Wednesday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Astrid & Gaston, Best Restaurants, Cebiche, Central Ristorante, Ceviche, Chexz Wong, Javier Wong, Lima

The main reason I can think of to recommend a few days in Lima, Peru (other than if one’s spouse has a speaking engagement there) is to enjoy the marvelous food ‘revolution’ that has taken over that city.

Ask a dozen individuals who either live in Lima or know it well for the name of their favorite restaurant, and I bet you’ll get 12 different recommendations, or at least 10 different ones.

We had three outstanding meals and two other good ones over a period of four days.

Put these three restaurants on a list for when you find yourself in Lima:  Central (beware the Pisco Sours – they’re strong and two will loosen your tongue, etc.), Astrid & Gaston (try the tasting menu), and Chez Wong (see below).  You will be stunned by the presentations and even more by the tastes of what you are served. You can’t go wrong with any of these three expensive but memorable restaurants.

One of the three, however, is so unusual and so outstanding that if you are in Lima and do not go there, consider yourself to have made an horrendous mistake.

Continue reading »

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The Real Mike O’Brien (Revisiting “The Sessions”)

29 Monday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

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Best Documentary, Breathing Lessons, Mike O'Brien, The Sessions

Often when I see a film that is either called a ‘documentary’ or based on ‘a true story,’ I find myself wanting to know how true the film really is.  The question that repeatedly comes to my mind is “am I being manipulated/mislead by the film?”  I want to know the ‘truth.’

And then the next question arises, “Does it really matter if the film departs from the reality, from the facts?

In a film I recently saw and recommend, The Sessions, I again experienced those questions.

If you have seen the film, then here is an article written by Mike O’Brien and an interview with him you may find of interest. Together, they add to The Sessions and raise questions about the film.

On Seeing a Sex Surrogate, Mike O’Brien, The Sun Magazine, May, 1990.  This article served as the basis for The Sessions and goes a bit beyond the film

Breathing Lessons: The Life and Work of Mark O’Brien, by Jessica Yu, a 35-minute documentary that is largely an interview with Mike O’Brien in 1994. It won an Oscar in 1966 for Best Documentary Short Subject.  (There are three 15-second ads that interrupt the video, but stick with it. It’s worth it.)

Your thoughts?

 

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Ellen Miller’s Peruvian Amazon Pix

28 Sunday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 6 Comments

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Amazon, Aqau Expeditions, Peru, Photos by Ellen Miller

My wife Ellen and I returned recently from a four night-five day trip to the Peruvian Amazon.

We flew from Lima to Iquitos where we were met by a guide from Aqua Expeditions. We then drove to board their 12-cabin, 24 passenger boat where we had wonderful food, air conditioning, hot showers, and stayed in a cabin with windows that allowed us to look out on the rain forest as the boat traversed the river for a total of 450 miles (round trip).

During the day we would venture out on small skiffs with one of three wonderful guides, sometimes walking in the rain forest for two or three hours, other times just exploring small tributaries and observing both wild life and human life along the way.

Most of our fellow travelers were ‘bird folks,’ and they were delighted with every flapping and every sighting. We mostly just enjoyed being in a very different environment and learning about a world we did not know.

Here are 16 of Ellen’s pictures:

Continue reading »

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One Downside to Our ‘Smart Phones,’ iPads, etc.

26 Friday Oct 2012

Posted by Richard in Escapes and Pleasures

≈ 10 Comments

I enjoy all three of my Apple devices and use them all everyday: my iPhone for texting, for being in touch with my family, and even for the occasional phone call; my iPad for reading, watching baseball, checking email, staying up to date on what’s happening in the world, and for its mobility, and my laptop for working on MillersTime or writing more than 140 characters or short emails.

But there’s a price (beyond money) for all this connectedness and ability to be in touch.

I’ve always felt there are three ways to enjoy something, three ways to experience an event, an activity, or what we do: looking forward to it, enjoying it while it’s happening, reflecting on it after it’s over.

Most people, myself included, seem to be better at the first and third of these than at the second.  At least that’s been my working assumption for years.

With the added reality of our new technologies, I think there is a further diminishing of our ability to fully engage in something while it’s happening because we also often have our eyes on our ‘smart’ phones, tablets, etc.  We are so constantly connected and checking them that I think our attention is diluted from what we are engaged in at any given moment.

Pick almost any activity – parents in the park with their kids, people driving, fans watching a sporting event, diners at a restaurant, people walking along the street, folks traveling, etc. – and there’s a good chance some of them/us are also checking our phones for messages, texts, pictures, info, etc.

Or what about the intrusion to reading? When I’m reading on my iPad, I find myself at the end of every few chapters, checking my email or a baseball score, or for some other piece of information that takes me away from what I’ve been reading.

I’ve noticed over the years that when some new technology captures our attention, whether it’s the TV, tape recording, pagers (remember those?), desk top computers (remember those?), music players, cell phones, etc., the tendency is initially to over use them before we learn to control our use.

But I sense something different is happening with the smart phones and our ability to be always ‘connected.’ Whether it’s an addiction or not, I’m not sure, but I think they are more than just a distraction.

For all the benefits they bring, I think they also interfere significantly with our attention to events and experiences while they’re happening.

Am I just getting older and a bit fuddy-duddy, or do others see what I see?

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