ecosophia: (Default)
John Michael Greer ([personal profile] ecosophia) wrote2018-05-17 09:05 pm

An Experiment, Updated

turn off tv, turn on lifeEarlier this month I posted a few words here about a curious effect I'd discovered -- that sharp points of iron or steel seem to have the same power to dispel addiction to television, the internet, and cell phones that they traditionally had on faery glamour.  I wasn't expecting anything like the passionate response I got -- that entry got more comments than anything else I've posted here, including the very lengthy debate over the inept attempt at anti-Trump sorcery I critiqued a month ago, and a great many people agreed to give it a try. 

At this point some of the results are in, and I've been able to draw some tentative conclusions and draft a hypothesis on which further experimentation can be based: 

1) The effect seems to be real, and not just a matter of the placebo effect. Quite a few readers have reported immediate effects, not only on themselves, but on people who had no idea that the experiment was being tried, and who suddenly lost interest in television. 

2) The effect isn't guaranteed. Not everyone noted effects. In particular, when someone else in the household was using television, the internet, or their phone as a drug to avoid dealing with personal problems, that person's addiction was pretty reliably not affected by the presence of sharp iron. 

3) The effect can generate opposition. In a significant minority of cases, people who weren't in on the experiment found the sharp iron objects and removed them, even when there was no obvious reason to do so. 

My hypothesis is as follows: we're dealing with a genuine effect here, but the glamour it appears to counter is only one of the factors in the phenomenon of television addiction. Some people watch television or use other electronic media obsessively for personal reasons unrelated to the glamour. There may also be other variables that influence whether a sharp iron point will decrease the hold electronic media has on people.

At this point, I'm going to propose a few changes to the experimental protocol. First, if you have housemates who aren't in on the experiment, use an X-acto knife blade or a steel pin taped to the underside of the television, internet router, or other object, rather than a knife -- the knives are too visible, and can get noticed and removed. Second, try to assess whether your housemates' addiction to electronic media may be a way they use to avoid major issues, and keep that in mind when assessing your options. Other than that, if you feel inspired to join the experiment, give it a shot and see what results you get. 

(Anonymous) 2018-05-20 06:45 pm (UTC)(link)
It's possible I got resistance from the equipment itself. I noticed the positive effect had stopped and I'd sunk back into the zombie state, but it turned out the nail clippers were laying in the floor away from the modem and looked just like the modem had shrugged them off. Obviously the modem has wires coming out of it and one would only have to be accidently pulled to create the same effect, but it's an interesting thought. The nail clippers have now been reinforced with a needle taped to the casing and the effect seems to have come back. One thing I've noticed is if I deliberately try to zone out while the effect is going, I can do it but I don't seem to be able to go quite as deep and part of my brain stays alert to what is happening.