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Modern Addictions: Smartphones Essay

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As an international student who lives in a foreign country, my iphone is the simplest way to connect with my family and friends back home. This not the only thing I've benefited from my iphone, there are many things that I probably cannot do without my iphone around me. Somehow I thought of a question, can I live without that little device that’s called smartphone? Which can put the world at my fingertips and connects me to who I want at anytime. Well, definitely not. However, there is another question, quite the opposite of the previous one. Can I live with a smartphone after I read and saw with my own eyes the medical and scientific reports that talk about the harms health, mental, psychological, emotional and millions of germs that’s …show more content…

If the answer is positive, you are not the only one with this issue. The survey that took place in Stanford University, California. Between 200 students, "Almost half of the 200 students with iPhones polled at Stanford University say they're addicted to the device, with 75 percent admitting they take it to bed." The same study has found that among those surveyed 85, percent uses their phones like watches by knowing the hours or use it as an alarm clock. Furthermore, 75 percent confessed that they woke up with their phones in the same bed, as falling asleep with the phone. Are these ratios are sufficient to confirm that the relationship has reached the point of addiction? Many studies been conducted in the recent past has shown that this kind of addiction has negative aspects to many levels of health, mental and psychological as well. The term Fomo or "fear of missing out" it's really common these days. It basically means that fear of missing out something like checking emails or Facebook, can lead to miss out on something great, or you're interested in. An article that posted on Huffington Post, by Gabriel Mizrahi. Mizrahi has found a research that has done by scientists who are interested in this term. Researchers found that: "...lower levels of need satisfaction, general mood, and overall life satisfaction related to seeking out social media engagement only insofar as they related to higher

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