Mobile Phone Madness

A 21st Century syndrome

I’ve noticed a new, rather disturbing modern day syndrome. I’m concerned as there seems to be an increasingly large amount of the population suffering from this condition. “What is it?” I hear you ask in a desperate, paranoid tone. It is a syndrome I call MPB or Mobile Phone Blindness.

The poor sufferers of this syndrome are so unfortunate as to not even be aware they’re suffering from it. They look and act like regular members of the populace until they get a mobile phone in their hands. This is when the syndrome becomes active.

One suffering this condition loses all sense of space, of propriety, of manners and decorum. They become prone to walking into people and objects while busily writing text messages. They forget that every word they say can be heard and blithely chat loudly on a bus to a close friend about their spouse’s gastric problems or about their latest operation while in the middle of a busy restaurant. They also become exponentially more dangerous on the road, ignoring traffic signals, pedestrian crossings and emergency service vehicles.

This condition can occur at any time and in any location. Reports of suffers having attacks in cinemas, at live theatre and sporting events, at funerals and weddings are no longer uncommon. There is also a tendency for sufferers to verbally lash out at any who might seem to offer them some guidance or advice. In fact, in one instance, a sufferer, while madly texting an obviously important message to someone, walked into a garbage bin on the sidewalk then proceeded to lambast those within earshot for not warning her. Of course, half those around here also suffer from the same condition, so their understanding of the situation was extremely limited.

If you know a sufferer or if you see one in the throes of the condition, the only advice I can give is to avoid them at all costs. However, if you are brave enough, a swift clip under the ear usually snaps them out of their state, even if only for a short while. At least this way you will save them from walking into rush hour traffic.
35,109 views 32 replies
Reply #1 Top
Nice. And so true.

I hate it when people talk on their cell phones while crossing a busy street...and don't bother using the crosswalk. Are we supposed to stop for these idiots?
Reply #2 Top
Are we supposed to stop for these idiots?


Nah, use 'em as speed bumps
Reply #3 Top
this is great Maso, and I do know *gasp* one of them! It's a friend who is constantly on the phone or smsing someone even when we are supposed to relax in front of huge icecream.......

I'm thinking of a longterm cure but it's at your own risks because the reaction of the sufferer could be very violent...........
Reply #4 Top
As a customer care 'consultant' for a major cellphone company, the one thing that honestly freaks me out, is taking payments for said service from people who are driving at the time. You wouldn't believe how many admit to near-death experiences while giving me credit card details. Of course, we're not allowed to refuse to take a payment at any time....

Reply #5 Top
IG,

Yep, I have a friend liek that too. It doesn't matter what we're doing, she will always, without fail, stop to answer her phone or check her messages. It is very distracting, particularly in the middle of a conversation.

Nicky,

In Australia, it is against the law to be driving a vehicle and talking on a mobile phone. In fact, on an episode of the Mythbusters, the boys went as far as seeing just how dangerous driving while talking on a phone was and it proved to be nearly as dangerous as drink driving. What are the laws like where you are?

we're not allowed to refuse to take a payment at any time....


Of course you're not. It wouldn't be business, would it?
Reply #6 Top
and it proved to be nearly as dangerous as drink driving


I totally believe that.

On post cell phone use while driving is cause for a ticket, although it's allowed off post.
Reply #7 Top
I was nearly run over on a pedestrian crossing right outside the hospital where I work by a woman in a large SUV who couldn't be bothered stopping to allow pedestrians and blithely drove through the crossing all the while chatting away merrily on her mobile phone. She then had to stop about 20 yards down to wait at a traffic light. I walked down and lightly tapped on her window. When she looked around, I simply said "I'm sorry but you nearly ran me down at the pedestrian crossing behind you. Were you even aware?"

At first she looked puzzled and then she told me to "F#%k off and get a life."

I laughed and replied "Well, if you had it your way, I would have just lost mine under the wheels of your ridiculously stupid, oversized car." I flipped her the bird and walked off. She went ballistic, yelling and honking her horn like a crazy woman. She, among others, was the inspiration for this article.
Reply #8 Top
Another problem.  With Blue tooth, you cannot tell which ones are talking on phones, and which ones are the crazy coots talking to themselves!
Reply #9 Top
Excellent article Maso.

I believe it was my desire to avoid this terrible malady that led to my wife and I holding off on getting cell phones for so long. And even still, when I am calling to tell her I am on my way home (or vice versa) I basically say "Hey, see you in a bit" and anything else can wait until we are face to face, to avoid just such idiocy.

In the past, when I see someone completely ignorant of their surroundings, as they are so absorbed by their phone, pulled a banana out of my lunch and held it up to my ear. They look at you like you have lost your mind, and then realization sets in and they look just a bit sheepish as they hang up.
Reply #10 Top
Yeah- what's up with that? What I want to know is what is there to talk about so much? I took my wife to a doctor appt. a while back and there was a lady in the waiting room on her phone talking the whole time- even when the nurse called her to the back she was yakkin' away and following her. I wonder if she put her feet up in the stirrups and the doctor did the "up periscope" thing on her if she was still goin' at it. Weird.

Another thing that baffles me is how people worry on about cell phones causing cancer. What I worry about is them crashing into my poor ass in traffic while talking and being distracted by one. Go figure...

Excellent article Maso.


I concur with Bluedev!

Reply #11 Top
Ohhh no! I hate to admit it, but I am quite attached to my mobile phone! I'm not constantly on it, but I do get rather distracted by it. I am not as bad as you described, and if it does go off to often, I get irritated with it, and it goes off! I just can't imagine the world before my mobile. How did I communicate with people? Hehe...good article though! People on buses are the worse. I don't want to know the ins and outs of their life thanks! It's like a one sided Jerry Springer Show! Good article though x
Reply #12 Top
#7 by dynamaso
Tuesday, May 23, 2006

I dont know how you deal with such idiocy, it would have made me mad!!!!GRrrr!!! So yeah just wanted to say good on ya for being smart and talking instead of hitting the car like i would have done
Reply #13 Top
#8 by Dr. Guy
Tuesday, May 23, 2006



[Dr. Guy]
Another problem. With Blue tooth, you cannot tell which ones are talking on phones, and which ones are the crazy coots talking to themselves!


Yep. As truckers tend to use hands free devices I am seeing more and more of them walking around with those stupid earpieces stuck to the sides of their heads. I wonder if they realize just how dumb they look?

If someone wearing one speaks to me I ignore them. If they draw my attention to the fact that I am ignoring them I point to the stupid looking headset and say I thought they must have been talking on the phone as nobody with any sense would walk around wearing one of those things when they weren't.
Reply #14 Top
Doc,

Another problem. With Blue tooth, you cannot tell which ones are talking on phones, and which ones are the crazy coots talking to themselves!


Dead right. Yeah, I forgot about this one. I was in a supermarket aisle recently and this guy started talking quite loudly. I thought he was talking to me. I turned around to ask he to repeat himself. He looked at me like I was mad then started pointing at the side of his head, the side he had turned away from me. He then turned his head so I could see the ear piece he was wearing. I didn't know what to say so I just walked off. And he thought I was mad...

BlueDev,

Excellent article Maso.


Thanks mate.

I basically say "Hey, see you in a bit" and anything else can wait until we are face to face


Oh I neglected to say this malady doesn't occur with every mobile phone owner. I own one myself and will admit there are times when I'd be lost without it. Like you, I treat mine the same way. I would rather talk to the person than to a piece of plastic.

Shovel,

there was a lady in the waiting room on her phone talking the whole time- even when the nurse called her to the back she was yakkin' away and following her. I wonder if she put her feet up in the stirrups and the doctor did the "up periscope" thing on her if she was still goin' at it. Weird.


I just wonder what it so important it can't wait until you're finished with a doctor's appointment or the drive home or...

The other thing concerning me about mobile phones is the amount of resources used to make them, considered how many there are, and the amount of waste produced once the phones become 'obselete' and the owners upgrade to the latest. Cancer, I think, is the least of our worries.

Sally,

I am quite attached to my mobile phone! I'm not constantly on it, but I do get rather distracted by it.


I think anyone who owns one can become attached to it. Hey, they're useful devices. I can't tell you how many times they've got me out of a hole. But I am aware of how I use it and where I use it, unlike a lot of people out there.

Em,

I dont know how you deal with such idiocy, it would have made me mad


Believe it or not, I really had to restrain myself from kicking a panel and scaring the crap out of her. It would have made me look like the one out of control. I'm glad she ended up looking like the crazy person instead of me.
Reply #15 Top
Mason,

I am seeing more and more of them walking around with those stupid earpieces stuck to the sides of their heads. I wonder if they realize just how dumb they look?


Again, I must say I like the technology. All my 'Star Trek' fantasies revolved around the communicator and how cool it would be to have a phone like that. Well, now we have. The earpieces do look dumb, though and those walking around talking in the them don't do themselves any favours.

If someone wearing one speaks to me I ignore them. If they draw my attention to the fact that I am ignoring them I point to the stupid looking headset and say I thought they must have been talking on the phone as nobody with any sense would walk around wearing one of those things when they weren't.


Excellent tactic. I will have to try this myself.
Reply #16 Top

Dead right. Yeah, I forgot about this one. I was in a supermarket aisle recently and this guy started talking quite loudly. I thought he was talking to me. I turned around to ask he to repeat himself. He looked at me like I was mad then started pointing at the side of his head, the side he had turned away from me. He then turned his head so I could see the ear piece he was wearing. I didn't know what to say so I just walked off. And he thought I was mad...

You know, the old jokes are getting really tired.  We need new ones.  And this is it! 

Airplane! 

Yep. As truckers tend to use hands free devices I am seeing more and more of them walking around with those stupid earpieces stuck to the sides of their heads. I wonder if they realize just how dumb they look?

I refuse to answer on the ground my wife may pound me!

Reply #17 Top
Doc,

the old jokes are getting really tired. We need new ones. And this is it!


You're right. I'm glad you liked it. Real life is funnier than any invented joke, isn't it?

Reply #18 Top
Whip,

Good point. Ya know, it might not be nice but to see some of these idiots bounce off the hood of a car is disturbingly appealing.
Reply #19 Top
Survival of the fittest. Improve the gene pool. Stop protecting the stupid.
Reply #20 Top
Improve the gene pool. Stop protecting the stupid


I wonder if we could start hunting 'em. But then, it all gets subjective. How stupid is too stupid? Do we need to develop a stupidity means test? Or do we simply let them walk out into traffic, putting potentially unstupid people at risk too?
Reply #21 Top
Mobile Phones are here to stay. When people drive while speaking on the phone they are not only putting their own lives at risk but also the lives of others. The microwave radiation is bad very bad for the brain. Moblie Phones are supposed to be a communication device, but people use it like they use their fied land phones. I prefer the giid old land lines.
Reply #22 Top
Funny, JU seems to have all the normal people in the world since only one person here admitted to actually doing any of this. Come on people, most of us know we have done this at least once. Even I admit of talking while driving and not being completely careful from time to time, heck I almost hit someone just for changing the radio station.

Mobile Phones are here to stay. When people drive while speaking on the phone they are not only putting their own lives at risk but also the lives of others. The microwave radiation is bad very bad for the brain. Moblie Phones are supposed to be a communication device, but people use it like they use their fied land phones. I prefer the giid old land lines.


I don't get you Bahu, first you say they are here to stay as if to contradict everyone, then you agree with everyone by saying that these people put everyones life in danger. Then you talk about radiation which I have yet to see anyone die from it of end up in a hospital for it. At least I haven't. BTW, cellphones are communication devices, what do you think people do with them? I rarely see anyone play games on them, some people take pictures, but they get bored after a while and only use it when something worth taking a picture happens. I do agree that land line phoes just can't be beat when it comes to not losing a call and not having to answer the phone everytime it rings because it stays home.
Reply #23 Top
I really, really hate to see a fellow trucker holding a cell phone while driving and fuss at those dolts over the CB on a regular basis as do many other truckers. What you describe LW is nothing short of total stupidity. When I'm at the controls of my rig, the cell phone stays in it's holder. Period.

If I need to make a call, I find a place to park. If someone calls me, I find a place to park, check the caller ID, and return their call. It's just far too easy to make a minor mistake that can cost literally millions of dollar or even worse someone's life.
Reply #24 Top
I think it was para who wrote one of his early articles on rules for cell phone users. As far as I'm concerned, his article should be printed out and distributed with every cell phone sold!