Real Hearts, Real Minds


 

“If you don’t regularly exercise this capacity, it withers.” She adds, “Lucky for us, connecting with others does good and feels good, and opportunities to do so abound.” (See, “Your Phone vs. Your Heart.”)

 

So actually seeing each other in person makes a big difference over texting or email. It’s a richer connection that affects our biological bodies, our hearts, our muscles and nerves. But does this extend to virtual seeing, such as Skype or Facetime?

 

We have no research on this, so far as I know. Still, I suspect it’s not the same. It’s not just that the images we respond to on the screen are generally small and degraded, but also they are abstracted from their context. We may well see the facial expressions of those we speak with, but what about their postures? Or their subtle hand gestures or darting glances? Or what about smells or subtle kinetic clues to, say, breathing? To be sure, we may pick up some of that, but we will miss a lot as well. And it’s not just the movements we consciously detect. Two bodies sitting across from each other constantly attune and reflect each other in ways they seldom notice. They are picking up and processing signals only a tiny percentage of which reaches consciousness.

 

No doubt technology will improve, the bandwidth of communication will increase. But, still, if we are not in the same room, we can’t help but “multi-task,” listen to what’s happening next door, anticipate our next meeting or drift into thinking about dinner. And we won’t usually even notice that we are only half present, because we will have narrowed our focus as we try to screen out distractions and concentrate of grasping the message coming from afar through our device of the moment.

 

This is not to argue against cell phones or email or texting. It is merely to remind ourselves that these virtual connections are not the same as real interactions. The information we exchange digitally may be vital, but the experience we have of each other and of ourselves being with another is a big part of living. And, as Frederickson reminds it, we will lose it if we don’t use it.

Tags:
barbara fredrickson, communication, computers, connecting with others, facetime, facial expressions, hand gestures, hook ups, muscles, nbsp, nerves, new york times, positive psychology, postures, researcher, skype, social media, states of mind, subtle hand, synchrony, texting, two brains, ups

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