I’m
probably showing my age, but I remember the days of the TV test card. It
featured a girl playing Noughts and Crosses surrounded by an assortment of soft
toys. People used to sit and watch the test card while they waited for
programmes to start. It beat watching paint dry, but only marginally. Now we
have countless TV channels broadcasting 24/7. Schedules have been made more or
less redundant by various catch up services. ‘Total TV’ means you can pretty
much avoid being alone with your own thoughts.
Then
there’s mobile phones. Another device that was meant to be our servant, but
ended up gaining mastery over us. A recent report suggested we switch off our
phones after 10pm. Some users are so addicted to the things that they can’t get
through the night without checking for emails, or glancing at Facebook. Smart
phone induced sleep deprivation is making people depressed.
We
have become over-stimulated by the multi-media delights of the modern world.
It’s difficult to switch off. Yes, we have leisure time, but leisure is
different to rest. The American novelist Marilynne Robinson reflected,
“Leisure…is highly commercialised. But leisure is seldom more than a bit of
time ransomed from habitual stress.” An occasional day out an amusement park is
quite different to having a regular rhythm of work and rest built into our
lives.
I
wonder whether the craving for constant stimulation is an attempt to fill an
aching void in our lives. A void that technology and leisure can never satisfy.
The great Christian thinker Augustine of Hippo confessed to God, “You have made
us for yourself, and our hearts are restless until they rest in you’. Finding
this rest is not a matter of frantically trying to please God by our own
efforts. Jesus said, “Come to me all who labour and heavy laden, and I will
give you rest.”
* For various local publications.
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