Technology Ushers in Digital Utopia for ADHD Minds, Not Dementia

Photo by Blake Patterson In the last week of June the internet news sites were all buzzing about “Digital Dementia”. Oh noes! Your kids’ brains be shrivelin’. Watch out! It’s the cell phone’s fault! From what I’ve read, “Digital Dementia” was coined by a German author selling a book and made popular in tech savvy South Korea. Yet despite the rise of book reading in youth demographics due in part to the soaring popularity of ebooks, or the rise in communication & empathy skills because of—not despite of—all that abbreviated texting, it is time for another luddite march on technology. Horrors! Your kids don’t remember phone numbers anymore. Burn the iPhones! Unplug their Androids! Wait. Didn’t we grow up alright with speed dial? I seem to recall phone numbers still just fine. But here’s the trick: I don’t have to. My smartphone remembers all those numbers for me. I can use my mind now to learn Japanese, memorize tunes on my ocarina, or learn Markdown syntax. Important details like social security numbers, birth dates, etc. are still readily recalled. It seems that “Digital Dementia” is a condition coined by a hysterical press looking for link bait. As a guy with ADHD since before the age of personal electronics, I remember writing down my todos on a piece of paper. They would look like this: ❑ Buy milk ❑ Take out the trash ❑ Don’t forget your dr. appt. at 3pm If I was lucky, I’d take out the trash. Then I’d go out for milk...
Source: The Splintered Mind by Douglas Cootey - Category: Mental Illness Tags: ADHD Source Type: blogs