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Have Smartphones Destroyed A Generation? By Jean M. Twenge

Decent Essays

In her article “Have Smartphones Destroyed a Generation?”, Jean M. Twenge discusses the effects on “generation i” with rising smartphone and social media usage. In the article, she provides multiple statistics to support her claims on what’s happening with the “i generation”, and generations past through social media use. She concludes that while smartphones have some positive social impact on the generation (like lower teen pregnancy rates), there has been real damage to the generation as well. I have concluded that, our generation has been more negatively impacted through smartphone usage than positively impacted. This is a strong point to make but, through my own experiences and, after reading Twenge’s article I find myself thinking about what smartphones have done to us as a growing generation. I have witnessed firsthand numerous downsides to having a smartphone that Twenge reports on. To begin, I have owned a smartphone for five years and, have witnessed the loneliness that can come with it. Sometimes one can get so caught up with a phone that you don’t make plans with peers as often as you should, leading to little in person interactions (outside of school). I can see how this could lead to depression because I know that I need time with friends every now and then to feel sane. If this is true for others my age, then it is important to meet face to face to get the attention in person that one needs for mental health sake. It’s also difficult when people do hangout without you, you will know in minutes when their ‘get together” is blasted all over different forms of social media. I have seen others as well as myself be hurt by these posts when you believe you should have been invited. Once my friend (who I’d spent the past few new year’s evening’s with) told me she wasn’t having anyone over that year. That night I saw on social media that not only did she have people over, she had the same people over as the previous year there except me. This feeling of being left out can do some real deconstruction of one’s mind, and it hurt our friendship. Another example that comes to mind is when my friend from my dance studio kept getting left out of all activities we did outside of dance. She told me she

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