Guilty of Phubbing?

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phubbing

Phubbing: the scene is all too common. You are having dinner out and spot another couple being escorted to the table next to you. They are attractive and seem so focused on each other that it must be a first date. Only a waiter breaks the easy flow of conversation, for their eyes are almost locked with intensity.

Suddenly, the male half of the couple gets a call. Meanwhile, their carafe of wine is delivered and poured. You feel sympathy as the woman’s eyes gradually glaze over as she scans the room for any distraction. Sensing her discomfort, you notice the call takes fifteen minutes. What would you do in her place? Did she bring her own car to be capable of leaving? Would she tough it out and hope for an apology? Is this a normal practice for her date?

Changing venues, at the local gym you wait for a machine then notice someone is merely occupying the seat while only perusing their cell phone. Sometimes if you make your presence known they actually thank you for getting them back to the present. In fact, the entire row of machines may have “exercisers” obsessed with their cell screens. Stopping at Walgreens on the way home, even the cashier is chatting on the phone while taking your money. Do you feel valued as a customer? Later, during a stroll through a shopping mall you observe friends walking together while each reading their own cell texts.

Obviously, we all have a different “cell phone etiquette”. What one person considers rude may be standard behavior for another.

Personally, I have a variety of “cell- free experiences” for which I place the here and now, safety, or courtesy before calls, messages, and e mails. For example, on a relaxing hour-long walk outdoors, I prefer the sights and sounds of nature to a phone ring. Likewise, the phone remains in a locker at my gym. A recent report found that gym-goers lose up to forty percent of their workout taking calls. Even if they finish during the allotted time, balance, coordination, and effort expended suffer. Moreover, for some reason those calls seem overly loud to others enjoying their work outs. Besides, only non- cell users can make new acquaintances in any venue, so virtual communications, be they through smart watch, Bluetooth, I- Pod, or cell phone, make social interactions that include eye contact and real speech, impossible.

Last week I invited someone over to watch our favorite team in a playoff game, When I realized a couple of my comments were unanswered, I was startled to see that he was receiving messages on his Apple watch and cell phone while also wearing a Bluetooth. I made a mental note to address the issue before we got together again. Watching the team alone may have been more fulfilling. My guest was so busy checking his messages that he forgot about the only live person there; ME!

As emphasized in a new book, “The Myth of Multitasking,” a relationship was being sacrificed due to a preoccupation with electronic messages and no “anchor task” or main priority. Partners, children, and friends may fall by the wayside. In fact, the practice of ignoring people for phones has become so widespread that there is a new word for “phone snubbing”, which has been shortened to “phubbing.” While the word “multitasking” is relatively new and sounds efficient, most of us can still only master on one task at a time.with any quality result. When we switch from one task to another, or do two simultaneously, studies show we actually lose time.

Isn’t it coincidental that since the proliferation of cell phones everyone has so many more “emergencies?” Any family member, even one that calls four times a day, is now crucial. People can even answer these calls during a movie, ignoring the annoyance to others concentrating on the big screen.

Are you a victim of Phubbing?

We have all been victims of “phubbing” to different degrees. Which of these situations bother you the most?

  • The lawyer you pay well uses ten minutes of your scheduled private conference for another client who calls on his cell phone.
  • A date spends almost half your first meeting on the cell phone. Every call is “an important family member in another state or “
  • Someone picks up your call on their car phone without telling you there are three other people listening.
  • In a doctor’s waiting room, a horribly loud and discordant ringer jolts
  • Someone accepts your call but for the third time cuts you off for another
  • One of your acquaintances only texts but will never
  • Some people text you only emojis, never
  • You text a thoughtful few sentences, but one person consistently responds with a single
  • A friend calls you by video chat and includes others you do not know in the
  • You are invited to a friend’s house. After you have only been there a few minutes, they take a call and never hang
  • At a restaurant for a family member’s birthday, your partner takes at least five calls about “business.” Each time, your SO leaves the restaurant and goes outside for five minutes or
  • You agree to an outing with your friend When their cell phone rings, they stay on that conversation until you reach the destination.
  • You barely are able to stop for a red light. Meanwhile, a pedestrian crossing the street walks into your car while answering a text message. They threaten you with calling the police.

Finally, rate yourself as a polite cell phone user. When do you ignore live people around you for devices?

  1. You are completely in the moment with the real time company around you.
  2. Rarely, but you make sure to review each call or This constant checking can make those around you nervous.
  3. You have no misgivings about leaving a room of guests for an important
  4. When you are with a client, you never interrupt their time for unexpected

If you have a particular telephone etiquette that works, can you summarize it and email it to this address?

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1 COMMENT

  1. I turn my ringer off, when in a doctors office or a church or a movie theater. I guess maybe I’m one of the lucky ones, who has an answering machine in my phone, which states if you leave a message that I’ll actually get back to you. technology, you’ve got to love it.

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