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VLOG Galia Brener
 

Galia Brener's column

Technology killed love

WhatsApp, email, sms, social media networks… they all destroy relationships and love! It's time to stop, and go back to the roots - by having personal contact again.
It was a long drive back home, and thankfully I was well equipped with a good book to read, two new flavors of chips I have never tried before, and some cold Coke Zero. Everything a girl needs for a comfortable ride on the train, from one end of the country to the other. Across from me was sitting a young lady with long dark hair and big blue eyes. I noticed that she was typing something intensely into her mobile phone. I could almost see the smoke of anger coming out of her ears! She continued to abuse the poor phone, pressing her sharp long nails on the screen, creating an awful unbearable sound, like nails scratching a blackboard. Suddenly, the girl aggressively threw her phone onto the carpeted floor of the train, and let out a frustrated, angry sigh. She had tears in her eyes.

I asked if everything was fine with her, and she told me that she broke up with her long-term boyfriend… on her mobile phone! To ease the tension, I jokingly said that it must have been a hell of an SMS she just sent, and that she probably used up all her messages with that long text. She looked at me, like I was from a planet where dinosaurs still existed. She answered, "SMS? Do people still use those? I broke up with him on WhatsApp of course!" The answer to a love that lasted for 3 years: a break up on Whats-Bloody-App! The poor bastard did not even deserve a good old-fashioned SMS. He was not worth the price of it. WhatsApp is for free. What the hell happened to our world?

The further technology develops, the worse personal communication becomes. People can sit and type for hours on WhatsApp, instead of hearing each other's voice, or meeting for a drink. Digital communication literally kills our relationships. A nice chat with your partner can turn into a disaster. One wrong letter, one wrong word, one wrong emoji smiley, and all of a sudden you are having a dreadful argument. The awful thing about digital communication is that it lacks the one and most important thing… emotions! Facebook is not much better. What if your man "liked" or wrote a “too-friendly” comment on a photo of a girl that you don’t know? Or even better, his ex-girlfriend contacted him. Or perhaps you find out the guy you are dating is flirting with ten other women on Facebook? Or perhaps even seeing them all? When our beloved Internet arrived, it brought with it many opportunities, but also many complications. The Internet turned us into a multiple-choice society. You can have A, B, C, D… or all of them online. It’s so easy to flirt left and right online with hundreds of men/women at the same time. In my opinion, this killed the purity of dating and love. Instead of searching for "The One and Only," now online it's all about dating and sleeping with “more and more”… or sadly even "ALL."

My friend Gloria once destroyed a new relationship due to WhatsApp, because she did not know how the program functions. She met a guy at a party in Sachsenhausen. He was a rocker with a dirty attitude. Just a nasty man who believed that he must sleep with all of the women in Frankfurt before he died. Actually she luckily saved herself by killing this relationship, but that's a whole other story. For now we shall only look at the mechanics of how technology killed this fake love. Gloria is a WhatsApp junkie. It's the oxygen she breathes and the digital food she eats to stay alive. After meeting this creep, she started her usual "WhatsApp Romance" with him. They would communicate only online. I asked her why she doesn't call him, and she said that if he wants to reach her, “he” should call. After they met a few times, Gloria fell for this idiot. She always complained that it took him too long to answer. She saw that he is online and typing something, but no text appeared on her screen. This happened a few times, so she accused him of being online and writing to “someone” else. He said that he was writing to her the entire time, but didn't send the messages because he wanted to write something nice, so he kept rewriting his messages. I told Gloria that it is true. If she saw beside his name "typing", then he was actually writing to her. She can’t see if he writes to someone else. She was devastated, shocked and angry with herself. She tried to save the new relationships, but it was too late. He accused her of being crazy and controlling… and all because of digital communication.

Thankfully there is a solution to this depersonalization and mass confusion. Instead of sending your loved one a text message, pick up the phone and call. You get to hear their voice, feel the emotions in their laughter, and share a few minutes of your day with them. If you have something important to say, try to do it with a call, or even better by talking to the person face-to-face. This will increase personal courage and strength of character. I have a new rule for myself (I am also guilty of using WhatsApp & Co.): if I feel that I have more courage to write to someone - which is the "easy" way out - then I wait to meet with them and say what's on my heart in person. Sometimes It's easier to say certain things or make confrontations electronically, instead of face-to-face. This takes courage away from people, and reduces empathy. Another thing that I would recommend, which I had to learn the hard way, is please do not have discussions with your partner via written words like sms, emails, Facebook, WhatsApp, etc. This will only make things worse because no emotions can be read. Meet them personally and work things out. Do not send angry messages on your phone. You will only hurt yourself in the process. Technology kills love. Of course we are busy, and do not always have time. In such cases texting helps, but nonetheless, let's try to keep a more personal contact to the people that are important to us. I am also guilty of this sometimes, and will start now. It's possible to save our relationships by being more personal. Let's not hide behind our technology and have the audacity to face the people we care about. After all, a real kiss can only happen when you look your lover directly in the eye… and not via FaceTime.
21. Juni 2013
Galia Brener
 
 
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Galia Brener am 24.6.2013, 13:46 Uhr:
Dear Steffen, thanks a lot for another great comment! I really appreciate you taking the time and writing your thoughts here. I feel really bad for your friend. How is he doing now? How did he take the news? If I can do anything to help, or give some advice about the breakup, he can write me an e-mail at: galia@journal-frankfurt.de

I wish you a great week,
Gali
 
Galia Brener am 24.6.2013, 13:43 Uhr:
Dear Grace,

Thank you very much for your very kind and open comment. I absoltely agree with you, and will make my boyfriend write me a love letter this weekend as well! Hahah ;-) I am happy that this article touched you, and was a wake-up call for you. It's a really nice feeling when someone reads your words and understands them... that they touch the right place in one's heart. I wish you a really nice week, and all of the very best, Gali
 
Steffen Schneider am 21.6.2013, 22:55 Uhr:
Great article! I also agree with Grace. I remember finding an old love letter that my grandfather wrote to my grandmother, and was so impressed. I wrote something similar on paper to my girlfriend, now ex, a few years ago, and she did not appreciate it. Instead, she got angry at me why I dont answer to her text messages on time, or write her on the phone more often. She also accused me of not posting enough love words on her Facebook wall. Crazy behavior. I erased whats app on my phone. The more chances we have to communicate online, the worse we communicate offline - in real life. People walk on the street with the heads buried into their mobile phones, and lovers sit beside each other and with eyes glued to their mobile phones, instead of on each other. They send kiss smiles instead of turning around and kissing... or maybe they even send kiss smiles to others, when their partners dont know. My best buddy's girlfriend broke up with him via email. She wrote him an email instead of having the guts to meet him and tell him in person. Galia is right, technology killed and still kills love. People must learn to communicate personally and live again. Thanks Galia for touching the most important topics we deal with today. Take care, S.
 
Grace O. am 21.6.2013, 19:47 Uhr:
Hello Galia. Such a valuable article! Actually I never gave it a serious thought, how an age of technology affects the relationships. And now, after reading you, I just realized that my boyfriend actually have never seen my handwriting!!.. And I am his? Wait? his first ?love you? confession was an email (with hearts all over on it.. digital hearts..:) Then we both thought its so cute and intimate.. But now, I think it is not. Today days people look for maximum outcome with minimum efforts. How could I actually settle for such ?love you? confession? I remember my mom was telling me how my dad told her he loves her. He actually wrote her the poem (on real beautiful paper, from his soul and heart, his own poem), he brought her beautiful flowers. She still keeps this poem? I have seen on this paper tiny spots on faded letters, there were her tears of happiness..:) That is priceless!

People communicate whole day through messengers thinking they keep their relationships alive, but thinking of that: it also kills this exciting feeling of anticipation of looking forward to meet each other and exchange hugs, kisses, news, thoughts which accumulated during the day. I have to confess that I stopped buying real books in shops, I buy them as an electronic version and read from computer. But it was a time when I and my boyfriend were going to book store, looking and browsing through shelves, exchanging opinions laughing, arguing and finally finding the book we both will read and enjoy. Age of technology.. made our lives easy and killed all these beautiful hours and minutes which were bringing so much joy of being with our loved once and bonding us together. From today I will not write emails to my family, but will visit them, will call them. I will write a REAL letter to my mom every week and will make sure my children will remember to do that to me! I want to have MEMORIES, I want to re-read the real letter from my husband and see these tiny spots from tears of my happiness when I first was reading it and I will show it to my children and grandchildren. We have to come back of being affectionate, loving and caring persons who will make an effort to show love to their loved once! Thank you Galia, it is a wake up call!!!
 
Wilhelm W. Koehler am 21.6.2013, 17:15 Uhr:
Dear Galia,

first of all, I wouldn't consider the UK's state of matrimony as overly representative for even the rest of Europe, let alone the whole world. After all they're a very strange island folk, they don't even drive on the right side of the road (just kidding, couldn't resist) ;-) Second I would like to know the source and the statistical methods leading to those numbers (33%) before I take them into account (not kidding). But anyway it doesn't oppose my opinion on the matter, because I still think these trends are due to the way people USE technology and not technology itself.

If the huge variety of dating, flirting, and chatting that becomes available through technology leads to so much personal confusion, that it kills your relation, you are either not mature enough for a serious relationship or you just haven't found the right partner yet or you aren't aware that it is the right partner. In any case that's not the fault of technology - and limits in that field of human interaction are set by character, not by communication devices. Of course we can compare the generation of our parents with our own generation and we will see that the number of divorces has dramatically increased. But there are plenty of factors that have to be taken into account for that. Social and religious acceptance of divorce is one strong point for instance, the influence of the social environment is another. The general tendency of wanting everything to be "faster, bigger, better, etc." can't be ignored, too. We need (or at least think we need) much more and stronger stimulus nowadays in almost every aspect of our lives. And so on...

The delevopment of the state of human relations in society at all is such a complex topic, that I doubt it can be reduced to a single group of reasons like technological progress. That would be like saying: "Today's cars run twice as fast as those in the 50s because tires have improved." - a far too general approach.

I totally agree with you that the personal contact eye-to-eye, face-to-face, cheek-to-cheek is the best way to deal with emotional communication, while "Zuckerberg's ant farm" certainly is the worst one. The critical impact of Facebook's "relationship status" has found it's way into many comedies and sitcoms for a good reason.

But if face-to-face contact just isn't possible at the moment, I still consider email, sms or -help-us-god- even Whats-f...-App as viable as a phone call - if we use it consciously and not just bloat away. And we all definitely need to get back to a sensual and refined use of language instead of "Yeps" and "Yucks" and "LOLs". After all words have so much variety to offer when it comes to love, starting with the lost art of compliments. The means of transferring those words are absolutely secondary, but -as usual- content is king :-D

Take care

Wilhelm
 
Galia Brener am 21.6.2013, 15:13 Uhr:
Dear Wilhelm, thank you very much for this wonderful and thoughtful comment. I agree with you on almost all of your points. However, I must say that since the rise of the internet and technology, love and marriages have been suffering more. It is a fact that over 33.3% of divorce cases in the UK have been due to social media networks, along with written misunderstandings via WhatsApp, sms, email, etc. The technology has given us such a huge variety of dating, flirting, and chatting that some people go lost in the process. There are no limits anymore.

I love Facebook. I enjoy every second I spend on it, and I use it for staying in touch with friends. However, I would not communicate with my boyfriend on it. In fact, I do not have one single photo of him online. I do not have arguments with him on WhatsApp, because I got burned in the past due to miscommunication. One wrong smiley, a late or wrong reply, a wrong choice of words...all could lead to huge arguments. To avoid such catastrophies, it is best to talk about important things personally. Face-to-face. Personal human contact - the touch, smell, taste... without it the emotions cannot be felt and expressed.

I think that we can improve our love if we communicate on a more personal level, rather than with 80% digital communication. It makes us lazy to make an effort. Why call when you can write a quick sms?

And you are right. We all have to make an effort to keep the love pure, real and special.

Thanks,
Gali
 
Wilhelm W. Koehler am 21.6.2013, 14:47 Uhr:
Dear Galia,

I just read your column (as I almost always do on Fridays), but this time I strongly disagree with you. You seem to blame the "downfall" (you even call it destruction) of romantic relations and love itself solely on technology, which is very superficial in my point of view - no personal offense intended.

It's not the machine, it's the operator! Technology in itself is neither good nor bad, the way we use it makes the difference. According to your thesis the lack of emotions that can be transferred by using digital technology is responsible for the decreasing quality or maybe even intensity of dialogue between lovers. Instead you propose, that if we can't meet face to face (which arguably is the best interaction of a couple), we should at least use the telephone , so we can hear eachothers voice. But I must say, that in my many years on the battlefield of love I have experienced quite a lot of romantic phone calls, that went wrong, because not every voice is so differentiated, that each nuance comes out in the meant way. And not everybody's hearing is so finely tuned, that he or she can tell the nuance that may have been intended. Not to mention that superb quality of vocal transmission is merely a marketing phrase of the telecommunications industry - and compared to ISDN, which IMHO marks the highest level in this regard until today, mobile and IP-based telephony were not exactly a step forward for the consumers.

And even before there was a telephone in every house, there already was an instrument of romantic communication in place, that worked quite well: the written word. Myriads of heartwarming loveletters and poems have proven that. When I was a young boy experiencing falling in love the first times in the mid 70s my mother always told me not to use the telephone to talk to my girl, but write a letter, because it offered so much opportunity for all those gentle phrasings that feed a romance better than anything else (except the physical contact). Besides, the costs of a 2 hour phone call were horrendous those days - which my father never forgot to mention.

That brings me to the conclusion that it can't be the now digitally written word, that is responsible for the decline of romance and love. Instead I claim that it is the lack of effort and time we are willing to put into this kind of communication and our relationships at all, which makes love and romance suffer so much. And that is a typical symptom of our fast pace, fast food and fast love world of today. What hinders us to write any kind of digital message in the same romantic way that those wonderful love letters were written long ago? Nothing except our willingness to do so. In fact digital technology allows us to transfer the written word faster and further than ever before. We can even include pictures, drawings and music if we wish to. The amount and the form of love and romance being transported along the way lies purely in our responsibility.

I am a totally digital person far beyond anything Nicolas Negroponte predicted 1997, but that has neither killed my sense of romance nor my ability to love or to communicate with the ones I love. In fact technology has expanded my chances to meet women all around the world, based on a similar mindset, our sense of humor and other attributes, that I would never had a chance to meet without technology. Technology can even be a blessing for long distance relationships due to video calls, IM messengers and other means.

It's not technology that's killing love - it's our attitude towards love. And my advice to those who wonder how to achieve this level of romance via digital communication is simple: "What goes around, comes around!"

Yours

Wilhelm
 
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