Switch off? In the digital age, we’ll always be reachable

Switch off? In the digital age, we’ll always be reachable
New Romantics — Our constant online presence means we’re always available, even when we don’t want to be.

This week, it happened again: an unexpected text found its way to my phone after three weeks of silence. It got me thinking about availability: how we’re available, where, to who.

Everyone has someone who comes in and out of their life intermittently: that’s not a phenomenon unique to the internet. But, as I’ve discovered, the range and breadth of our online lives make it far easier for someone to pop up again and again, picking you up and putting you down as and when they please – something my friend Hayley described as “a whack-a-mole of emotional distress”.

This is particularly difficult when you’re trying to extricate yourself from a romantic relationship. You archive their chat on WhatsApp: they text you instead. You block their number so they can no longer call: they send you an email. There’s almost always somewhere – some backchannel, some avenue – someone can reach you if they really want to. The ubiquity of last seen and blue ticks and online statuses adds to this perpetual availability: someone’s tangibly, measurably there. You can feel them.

It’s startling what impact this can have on us. What is a text? A text is disposable, a half-thought, the shadow of a memory of a feeling: what harm can it really do? A lot, it turns out. An unexpected text can quickly pierce our emotional unavailability, no matter how hard we’ve worked on it, no matter how much time has passed. It jolts us into a new, uneasy present, one we’ve lived before and were happy to see the back of.

This often comes at exactly the wrong time, too, the person you don’t want to hear from seemingly intuiting that your feelings have changed. “I feel like I’m finally getting over it,” I tell my friends in the pub on Monday night; less than 12 hours later the inevitable message comes, he and I like two tin cans on the end of a suddenly quivering string.

I can’t say it was a huge surprise: because we’re all so easy to reach, we start to expect it, the restless period of waiting and counting and watching our inbox lasting longer and longer before we snap and stop caring. He could reach you by text or by email or by Facebook or by WhatsApp, he could send you an Instagram DM, a tweet. Sometimes he won’t. But sometimes he will.

This in-between impossibility reminds me of a poem by Richard Siken, ‘You are Jeff’: “When he throws the wrench into the air, it will catch the light as it spins towards you,” he writes. “You had expected something else, anything else, but the wrench never reaches you. It hangs in the air like that, spinning in the air like that.” Online, that wrench can spin forever.

We all know that the internet can help us reach almost anyone, whether that’s emotionally or literally: we ourselves can be open to anything from totally consuming mutual intimacy to simple, basic contact, words on a screen that uncomplicatedly communicate nothing but themselves. But when this connection is so intermittent, it can turn into a kind of cruelty: we know someone’s there even when we’re not, and we take advantage of it.

It’s not sustainable. After a while you have to switch off, close the channels. You have to redirect the email to spam, block the number for (your own) good; you have to understand that their silence is a meaningful action in itself. You have to stop putting yourself through it; you have to grit your teeth and make yourself unavailable, close your eyes and wait. Eventually, it has to stop: eventually, you have to let the wrench hit you or fall to the floor.

Follow Emily Reynolds on Twitter.

Enjoyed this article? Like Huck on Facebook or follow us on Twitter.

 

Latest on Huck

The disabled Flâneur forcing us to rethink our cities
Culture

The disabled Flâneur forcing us to rethink our cities

This perspective-shifting short film follows Phil Waterworth, the wheelchair-bound urban explorer confronting a lack of accessibility in cities like Sheffield.

Written by: Alex King

Chronicling conflict and survival in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Photography

Chronicling conflict and survival in the Democratic Republic of Congo

A new photo exhibition documents how a brutal conflict on the eastern edge of the country continues to devastate the lives of civilians.

Written by: Miss Rosen

A playful look at Gen X teens coming of age in 1980s America
Photography

A playful look at Gen X teens coming of age in 1980s America

After fleeing Pinochet, Sergio Purtell created a photographic love letter to the people of his adopted home with the knowing eye of one who has seen their homeland fall to fascism.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Revisiting the legendary Rastafari community of Ethiopia
Photography

Revisiting the legendary Rastafari community of Ethiopia

A new book brings together a powerful collection of photographs and first person accounts of the lives of a people committed to building a new world.

Written by: Miss Rosen

A peek behind the scenes of the UK’s village hall wrestling community
Huck 81

A peek behind the scenes of the UK’s village hall wrestling community

For the latest issue of Huck, photographer Adj Brown captures the transformation of a sedate Cornish village hall into a sell-out wrestling show.

Written by: Josh Jones

In photos: Inmates of the oldest women’s prison in the USA
Photography

In photos: Inmates of the oldest women’s prison in the USA

A new photobook, ‘Women Prisoner Polaroids’, revisits Jack Lueders-Booth’s seminal, humane portrait of women incarcerated in Massachusetts’ MCI Framingham.

Written by: Miss Rosen

Sign up to our newsletter

Issue 81: The more than a game issue

Buy it now