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Overconnectivity: The Snake In Our Digital Garden Of Eden (Page 62)

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Overconnectivity: The Snake in Our Digital Garden of Eden (Page 62) The message from this section sticks out to me because I am surprised about the average smartphone user checks his or her phone around 150 times a day (Huffington, 2015). The statistic shows that how often smartphone users check or use their phones per day. Moreover, it also tells us how our brain is forced to distract attention continually, and it becomes difficult for us to focus on certain things when we use the smartphone too often. Technology products are like the serpent in the digital garden of Eden, which gives us what we want, but not necessarily what we need. Technology devices will not be helpful for people when we either overuse it or become addicted to it. My …show more content…

However, my thought was changed by the first sentence that the author stated “the effects of giving as we age are especially dramatic” (Huffington, 2015, p. 240). I realize that this is about the love of giving afterward. When we are giving, we are also spreading and sharing love with others. Moreover, I feel when we are little as a kid, we tend to give more than we are in the older age; maybe this is why children are always happier than adults. The message from this section sticks out to me because of the statistical findings shows that more than 75% of the employees who had volunteered said they felt healthier; more than 90% said volunteering had put them in a better mood, and more than 75% reported experiencing less stress (Huffington, 2015, p. 241). I have no idea there are many benefits when we give or volunteer until I read this message. I believe I can use this to improve my relationships with others by volunteering in the community such as help the elders or the children and affect others to give as well. A relationship can be built up by giving, which also gives me the opportunities to become friends with others. Moreover, giving expands my relationships within the social

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