Thanks to
the technogeek who long ago found a way to allow mobile phones
to
send text messages limited to one hundred and sixty characters,
it would seem that people in the UK, especially females
under the age of twenty two, have lost the ability
to write simple English. Instead they now only seem able
to write in the emerging shorthand
language with the most uninspiring
of uninventive names; 'text,' as in text messages used
on mobile phones. It's the new
'slanguage' of fools, better even than Esperanto!
Such is my annoyance with the staggering penetration into our
daily lives that the SMS (Short
message services) phenomenon has
had, I have come up with
a new policy: I simply ignore
all text messages sent to my mobile phone unless they require
a response for safety or important informational reasons. Text
messages such as "hey wot
u up 2?" are now met with silence, not a word, not even
a word with letters missing. Nothing. However, if the person
who sent the text message chooses to call me, then that's okay.
I
am happy
to chat on the phone, but thumbing
some badly written text message? No!
Last November alone I sent 178 text messages, each costing me
10p and taking me far longer to type than it would have to
simply spoken the appropriate response. If the person had
simply used the phone in the way
Alexander Graham Bell had
originally intended they would have saved me a lot of time and
trouble
sitting there thumbing tiny little letters onto a micro sized screen
that will surely do nothing but increase my chances of becoming
short sighted!
Text messages are, on the whole, nothing
but a nuisance, an interruption
and often a disruption. I have considered having the 'feature'
of text messaging on my mobile phone switched off so as to halt
the growing influx of garbled rubbish that beeps and vibrates its
way into existence. I've even given serious thought to actually
doing away with my mobile phone entirely!
Picture the scene, if you will. You're chatting
over lunch with a friend when, 'Beep beep, beep beep,' they
get a text message. Straight
away they're
no longer
listening
to you, instead they're reading the message. You become distracted
by this interruption because now they start tapping away
on their phone, thumbing
a response, completely
unaware
of how insulted you are. You stop speaking while they tap away
at the tiny numeric key pad, only to have them say "Carry
on, I'm just texting."
Their
reasoning, of course, is that text messages are somehow less intrusive
than
an actual telephone call. However if the phone rang then they might
say "I'm
actually at lunch with my friend at the moment, can I call you
back?"
But right now they're 'texting,' happy to thinly spread
their attention between you and their damn mobile phone. After
they
press send they'll ask you to repeat your last few sentences
because no matter how hard they tried, they didn't hear what you
just said
because
they 'tex ting' rather than listening! You repeat yourself
of course, but just like them, you're now waiting for the
inevitable
reply to the text message they just sent.
Now though, 'text' is
infiltrating every day life like American brand culture and fast
food. People
(especially girls I notice) are starting to shut
down the language parts of their brains in order to
write emails and letters composed
entirely in text message shorthand. And with the limitation
of only being able to send 160
character messages lifted, they seem to rejoice in an orgy
of little words with
letters missing and mammoth blocks
of text that are unbroken by paragraphs or punctuation.
More and more people seem to find it acceptable to send emails
written in 'text', emails that are as ugly to look at as they
are hard
to read. Huge blocks of airtight text, mixed and mangled together
like smashed
cars in a road accident. Each difficult sentence
follows the last like the incoherent shards of conversation
as a dentist works on his patients teeth. The suffocated words
leave the reader racing to get to the end of the email so as they
can gasp for breath
like a pearl diver after an impossibly long exploration of the
sea bed.
I strain to understand such messages. They read like badly spelled
broken English that requires an effort to decipher. It infuriates me
knowing that the person who wrote this speaks with the same mother
tongue as I. They tell me of course that it's far easier
and quicker to read and write 'text' but there emails leave me unconvinced.
"Yo, watch bin up2 l8ly dod hey? Happy BDAY!!! Woodwind
u do2 celebr8+woodwind u get? I went 4 a meal on thurs wi faze
me bro+his m8 2celebr8 Farrell+FA bs bdays.It woozy a lard, but
even moor of a lard woozy my uncles 50th bay party on friday with
much
drinking and dancing
thor I'd b doing YMCA sitting down huh? Ne ways rite me beak pronto
s' il vogues plait simon...cya!"
Even Scotland's
oldest tongue is getting the text-message
treatment as Gaelic-speaking mobile phone users have managed to devise
a way to combine
the two infamously
difficult languages. According to 'Scotland
on Sunday' asking one
of
the
other 60,000 Gaelic speakers in Scotland on a date has been hacked down from
An Enid
thus Omaha
ri um? (Will you go along with me?) to 8Ucolrm? Desired nab saccharin,
for weekend, has been cut down to dn7n while saying taped
bleat, Gaelic for thank you,
has been cut to tap l@.
Marilyn Gillies, the compiler of Gaelic’s first text-message
dictionary and editor of a youth-orientated
Gaelic website, dismissed concerns that the text abbreviated version
of the language would undermine Gaelic literacy. Indeed she even
went as far as claiming that it would get children into the habit
of using the Gaelic in more and more contexts. But personally I have
already seen evidence to suggest that 'text' does indeed effect literacy,
with
people using text abbreviations not only in email but also serious
business communications and even job
applications!
It seems however that those who love to text rubbish could be at
risk of getting a painful
payback for their love of text in the form
of a 'Text
Message Injury' (TMI),
a form of repetitive
strain injury (RSI).
A fact that Australian authorities
felt
serious
enough about
to
warrant
a national
awareness
program in which Australians were urged to practice 'safe text', though
I am not entirely sure what that involves.
Quite apart from the physical
concerns of excessive 'texting' is
the worry that a growing number of people could actually become
'textaholics.' Fifty-five
people were being
treated in the UK last year at an exclusive
clinic for those suffering from Text
Message Addiction, a condition
that Dr
Mark Collins, of the Priory Clinic in south-west
London, claims is a growing problem.
Of course it won't be long now until the useful mobile
phone in
my
pocket starts receiving spam
text messages from advertisers and
scammers keen
to liberate me from my money. That would probably lead to my phone
spending more time switched
off than on, and
if it got bad enough then I would ask my mobile phone provider to simply
remove the SMS functionality from my phone.
I know that
these days a mobile
phone is, more often than not, much more than simply a phone, and
as useful as I know 'mobile technology' is, I'd rather simply use
my phone
the old fashioned way. If people want to have a chat with me then they
can call me because from now on I don't do text!
|