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English, 10.05.2021 06:40 onwugbonup

Activity 4. Read to Find the Evidence Read the text below, then answer the questions that follow.

For Conversation, Press #1

by Michael Alvear

I’ve got a cell phone, e-mail, and voice mail. So why am I so lonely?

A funny thing happened on the way to the communications revolution: we stopped talking to one

another. I was walking in the park with a friend recently, and his cell phone rang, interrupting our

conversation. There we were, walking and talking on a beautiful sunny day and–poof!–I became invisible,

absent from the conversation.

The park was filled with people talking on their cell phones. They were passing other people

without looking at them, saying hello, noticing their babies or stopping to pet their puppies. Evidently, the

untethered electronic voice is preferable to human contact.

The telephone used to connect you to the absent. Now it makes people sitting next to you feel

absent. Recently I was in a car with three friends. The driver shushed the rest of us because he could not

hear the person on the other end of his cell phone. There we were, four friends zooming down the

highway, unable to talk to one another because of a gadget designed to make communication easier.

Why is it that the more connected we get, the more disconnected I feel? Every advance in

communications technology is a setback to the intimacy of human interaction. With e-mail and instant

messaging over the Internet, we can now communicate without seeing or talking to one another. With

voice mail, you can conduct entire conversations without ever reaching anyone. If my mom has a question,

I just leave the answer on her machine.

As almost every conceivable contact between human beings gets automated, the alienation index

goes up. You can’t even call a person to get the phone number of another person anymore. Directory

assistance is almost always fully automated.

Pumping gas at the station? Why say good- morning to the attendant when you can swipe your

credit card at the pump and save yourself the bother of human contact?

Making a deposit at the bank? Why talk to a clerk who might live in the neighborhood when you

can just insert your card into the ATM?

Pretty soon you won’t have the burden of making eye contact at the grocery store. Some

supermarket chains are using a self-scanner so you can check yourself out, avoiding those annoying

clerks who look at you and ask how you are doing.

I am no Luddite. I own a cell phone, an ATM card, a voice-mail system, an e-mail account. Giving

them up isn’t an option–they’re great for what they’re intended to do. It’s their unintended consequences

that make me cringe.

More and more, I find myself hiding behind e-mail to do a job meant for conversation. Or being

relieved that voice mail picked up because I didn’t really have time to talk. The industry devoted to helping

me keep in touch is making me lonelier–or at least facilitating my antisocial instincts.

So I’ve put myself on technology restriction: no instant messaging with people who live near me, no

cell-phoning in the presence of friends, no letting the voice mail pick up when I’m home.

What good is all this gee-whiz technology if there’s no one in the room to hear you exclaim, “Gee

whiz”?

A. From the selection, copy the evidence to support the claim given.

I am no Luddite-



Pretty soon you won’t have the burden of making eye contact at the grocery store.


B. What are the technology restrictions imposed by the author to himself? Write your answer below.
1

C. List down ways on how the use of cellphone prevents us from talking to other people.

1.

2.

3.​

ansver
Answers: 1

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