Researchers last week warned that nomophobia – a phobia of being without your smartphone – is affecting everyone.
You know the feeling – you have left your phone at home and feel
anxious, as if you have lost your connection to the world. “Nomophobia”
(short for no-mobile phobia) affects teenagers and adults alike. You can
even do
an online test to see if you have it. Last week, researchers from Hong Kong warned that nomophobia is infecting everyone.
Their study
found that people who use their phones to store, share and access
personal memories suffer most. When users were asked to describe how
they felt about their phones, words such as “hurt’” (neck pain was often
reported) and “alone” predicted higher levels of nomophobia.
Solution
“The findings of our study suggest that users perceive smartphones as
their extended selves and get attached to the devices,” said Dr Kim Ki
Joon. “People experience feelings of anxiety and unpleasantness when
separated from their phones.”
Meanwhile, an American study shows that smartphone separation can lead to an increase in heart rate and blood pressure.
So
can being without your phone really give you separation anxiety?
Professor Mark Griffiths, chartered psychologist and director of the
International Gaming Research Unit at Nottingham Trent University, says
it is what is on the phone that counts – the social networking that
creates Fomo (fear of missing out).
“People don’t use their phones to talk to other people – we are
talking about an internet-connected device that allows people to deal
with lots of aspects of their lives,” says Griffiths. “You would have to
surgically remove a phone from a teenager because their whole life is
ingrained in this device.”
Griffiths thinks attachment theory, where we develop emotional
dependency on the phone because it holds details of our lives, is a
small part of nomophobia. For “screenagers”, it is Fomo that creates the
most separation anxiety. If they can’t see what’s happening on Snapchat
or Instagram, they become panic-stricken about not knowing what’s going
on socially. “But they adapt very quickly if you take them on holiday
and there’s no internet,” says Griffiths.
Deliberately separating from your phone by turning it off or leaving
it at home can reduce dependency and anxiety. Griffiths says the
criteria for phone addiction include it being the most important thing
in your life, building up the time you spend on it, withdrawal symptoms,
using it to de-stress or to get excited. Your phone-use also needs to
compromise relationships or work and provoke inner conflict – you know
you should cut down, but can’t. Few people, Griffiths says, fulfill
these criteria. But surely many of us experience some of them.
The Guardian, 29/8/2017