"NOMOPHOBIA "- A MODERN DAY RISING PHOBIA AMONG THE PEOPLE📱📲steemCreated with Sketch.

in #health7 years ago

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Nomophobia is the irrational fear of being without your mobile phone or being unable to use your phone for some reason, such as the absence of a signal or running out of minutes or battery power.

A phobia is by definition an irrational fear. In the case of nomophobia, the events that the user fears are not terribly unlikely, so that part of it isn't irrational. What is irrational is the degree of discomfort the users feel at the thought of being, in effect, separated from their smartphones.
The word nomophobia is a portmanteau made up of no + mobile + phone + phobia. The term was created by YouGov, a research organization based in the United Kingdom. In a 2008 study, researchers reported that 53% of mobile users felt anxious when they were unable to use their mobile phones and over half of users never shut their phones off. Subsequent studies have found that the numbers have increased since then.

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Is Nomophobia is real phobia

Nomophobia is a proposed name for the phobia of being out of cellular phone contact. It is, however, arguable that the word "phobia" is misused and that in the majority of cases it is another form of anxiety disorder.

^> Is Nomophobia a disease??
Nomophobia, also called “the disease of the XXI century”, is the irrational fear of being without cell phone. It is a disorder suffered by half of the population. It occurs due to by the irrational dependence on these devices that generates a feeling of anxiety in the user to feel cut off from the outside.

10 Facts You Should Know About Nomophobia: Fear Of Being Without A Mobile Phone!

  1. Nomophobia, a recently introduced term, is an abbreviation for "no-mobile-phone phobia"
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  1. People with nomophobia tend to be anxious when they "lose their mobile phone, run out of battery or credit, or have no network coverage".
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  1. According to YouGov's study, nearly 53% of mobile phone users in Britain suffer from nomophobia.
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  1. Same study also found that about 58% of men and 47% of women suffer from the phobia.
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  1. More than one in two nomophobes never switch of their mobile phone.
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  1. Additional 10% reported that they feel stressed when their mobile phones are off.
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  1. Other studies shown that phone addiction is caused by nomophobia, is negatively affecting the capabilities of human memory.
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  1. Having a source of near omniscience in their pockets, such people typically fail to remember simple things, including phone numbers of their family members.
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  1. Getting more and more dependent on mobile devices to access and keep information, such people mostly use their short-term memory for daily tasks and it weakens their long-term memory capacity.
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  1. It also known that nomophobic behavior reinforces social anxiety and phobia.

Symptoms

  1. Anxiety

  2. Respiratory alterations

  3. Trembling

  4. Perspiration

  5. Agitation

  6. Disorientation

  7. Tachycardia

Emotional symptoms

  1. Depression

  2. Panic

  3. Fear

  4. Dependence

  5. Rejection

  6. Low self-esteem

  7. Loneliness

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In the U.S., it’s gotten worse…

  1. Sixty-five percent, or about two in three people, sleep with or next to their smart phones. (Among college students, it’s even higher).

  2. Thirty-four percent admitted to answering their cell phone during intimacy with their partner. (Hey, what happened to valuing the person you are with in-person?)

  3. One in five people would rather go without shoes for a week than take a break from their phone. (It’s a good way to lose your sole and your soul).

  4. More than half never switch off their phone. (I’d call that an addiction).

  5. A full 66 percent of all adults suffer from “nomophobia.”

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It's time to take a break

Whenever I find myself needing something in order to cope, I always check my lifestyle and my health. This may sound crazy, but my rule of thumb is that I don’t allow myself to be brought under the control of anything. Outside of food, water and shelter, I guard myself against subjection to any addiction that begins to dictate my behavior. This includes technology. I recognize that cell phones, tablets, computers and other technology introduced in the future will make my life easier and enable me to work more efficiently. My principle, though, is this: Technology should be a servant, not a master.

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Very true, just when you are old like us you can only phone and answer getting much to complicated for us. :)

I think the issue as a whole is being over exaggerated. Without the cell phone, people would be watching more television, talking on a landline, spending time at the computer, or reading a book. All the cell phone does is bring this things together to one device, with allows for people to consume the entertainment they were already going to consume, at a centralized location.

Fifteen years ago people were harping against video games, thirty years ago people were harping against television, and even further back people were harping against radio and even books. We've reached a point in human evolution where entertainment is a priority, and as long as we view it as a priority, there's going to be people who harp against it.

We all fall victim to it in some capacity, one could even say that your desire to live simply is a form of entertainment, are you also falling into the trap so many cell phone users are?

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