Saturday, 24 December 2011

Cell Phone Manners

By Perlita Claiborne


Why do we find necessary as a society to constantly be on the phone? If live in or near any big city in the U.S. you will find the number of people walking the streets on a daily basis on their cell phones astonishing.

Who are they talking to? Are they talking to each other? Are they conducting important business while trying clothes on at the mall? Are they trading stocks and running companies while eating lunch at their favorite restaurant?

What is very important that it can't hold off until they're either in the privacy of their very own home or their offices to discuss?

Since the introduction of mobile phones into our society, our world stands forever changed. With mobile phone lines outnumbering landlines in several countries, more people are drawn into the 21st century even if their surroundings prove otherwise.

Once merely a luxury for the rich and famous, cell phones are now commonplace in day-to-day living. But having a cell phone doesn't automatically mean an individual is aware of proper phone etiquette.

In fact the use of mobile phones seems to have given people permission to be rude and not be accountable. Etiquette and general respect have all been tossed out the window. We are now forced to listen to private conversations about families, bodily functions, doctor's visits and everything else imaginable.

Somehow people have managed to forget that they are in a public place and everyone around them can hear what is being discusses and at an above average volume.

Sometimes the topics of conversations are just plain embarrassing. When we are out with our children doing our errands and the sort, we usually are not prepared to explain adult conversations to our little ones.

Maybe people don't realize we really don't want to know what happened when they got drunk in a bar the previous night.

People forget how loud their cellphone conversations are too. Do you really want the bakery girl on the other side of the store knowing what your test results from the doctor are?

One particular example is in driving. Many states today are trying to pass laws that ban drivers from using any sort of handheld phone unit while operating a vehicle.

They have proven a distraction and in society today when we are constantly on the move and in a hurry, we tend to multi-task more and pay attention less to what is going on around us.

Mobile phone etiquette has become such a problem that places of business are now beginning to ban the use of the mobile devices while there.

Movie theaters require that you turn your ringer off while inside. The National Association of Theater Operators is currently petitioning the FCC to make movie theaters exempt from the communications act of 1934.

Basically what this will do is make it legal to block cellular phone signals in the cinema. But it wouldn't have gone this far if people just did what's right to start with.

Maybe someday, there will be a mandatory class when you purchase a mobile phone. A class that teaches common courtesy and respect and of course, etiquette.




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