First name, last name, sex: easy enough. Email address, password, birthday: harmless. Registering my bare minimal information — data that could be skimmed over while flipping through the white pages — consumes five minutes of my time. I don't even understand the website I am registering for: Facebook.
My best friend and I needed a new way to talk and we were tired of our parents yelling at us for spending all day on the phone. Now, my mom was now able to jabber for hours with her mother, while my friend and I simultaneously communicate through Facebook.
Little did my friend or I know, we were taking a plunge into the defining factor of my era, which would push the limits of social privacy, acceptability and communication beyond anything anyone has seen before.
Within a week of when my friend explained what the "friend request" icon was, I had more than 50 people had become my "friends." I knew only a select few of their phone numbers, but it would not hurt to have a few more people to contact if I needed something.
Within months, more than 150 people were requesting to be a "friend." I suppose I had seen some of these people around school, and may need to talk with them sometime online. Within four years of joining, over 500 people had "friended" me. Perhaps someday I'll find a justification for accepting those requests.
Always my mentor of technology and especially Facebook, Ellis recently called me, raving about a new feature of the website we had joined so long ago: the timeline version. Defining this new template was a chronological explanation of your life, published online for every "friend" to see. The design requires users to provide information from before the Internet and Facebook were so ubiquitous. I asked Ellis why she submitted such personal information about herself, and her response was prompt: "That's the point of Facebook."
I thought the purpose of Facebook was to keep people in touch with each other. Somehow the mass usage of Facebook has transformed into an epidemic of blurred lines of social acceptability. It has become easier to message someone versus talking to or calling that person.
Apparently Ellis was right, the point of Facebook was to make communication easier; it has effectively removed the intellectual technique of conversing with a person. In face-to-face communication, body language, tone of voice, speech and many other components all play a contributing factor to successful conversation. But where have the human characteristics gone if a message is relayed from behind a computer screen?
Now with a few clicks of a mouse, and without ever saying "hello," I can scroll through the lives of my "friends." If everything important to me is posted online, what do I talk about when I see a friend face-to-face? Verbal conversation is becoming a dying art, ironically dismantled with the tool created to enhance and facilitate communication.
We should not completely submerge our lives into a public domain, but instead allow the characteristics of our personality to be revealed through face-to-face communication. Otherwise, we end up blind to the beauty of dialogue and the discoveries that accompany it.
Taking only five minutes out of my day to register for a website subsequently registered me for a future where rules of social interaction are bent, remade and rediscovered. It's time to rediscover the beauty of calling a person rather than sending a message. It's time to rediscover the "approach" of confronting a person in real time. It's time to rediscover humanity.
Allegra Babiarz is a senior at Elk Rapids High School.
Generation Why
Social Media: Lost magic of conversation
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I'm growing up with the Great Lakes
Flashback. Seats covered in what would now be considered horrendous upholstery and a car seat confining my limbs, thus preventing all mischievous movement.
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Even in the desert, I see the lakes
The sweltering sun seared my skin as I clumsily mounted an oversized Dromedary camel. It was barely 11 a.m. and temperatures had already approached levels of intolerable proportions.
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Facebook buries the true person
Until around the age of 6, I was completely convinced I was a robot.
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Family loves llamas in the mix
On a cold Christmas morning, Graceanne Tarsa crawls out of bed, but instead of running to the pile of presents and bulging stockings under the family's brightly lit tree, she heads out to the barn to feed the animals.
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Bedrooms give teens a place of their own
No matter where someone falls on the spectrum of organization, our bedroom is an expression of our personal style and an extension of ourselves.
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School dance is wrong place to flaunt it
Say goodbye to gowns and dance cards and hello to strategically ripped shirts, neon tights and bare skin.
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Anonymous protects what's morally right
Anonymous is an anarchy based group of computer nerds. This group of computer hackers has a long history, and it originates in 2003 as a popular Internet meme.
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Things are far apart and I can't drive
For the past seven months I've been a foreign student in Traverse City. There were many strange things I had to get used to, and many things I had to give up to — but I have no regrets.
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Michigan is big, with lots of trees
I have been in Michigan for seven months. I come from Rennes, in France, and I decided last year to spend one year in the Michigan to discover another culture and an another environment.
Continued ... - Monday, April 2, 2012
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Fearing for a life
Have you ever woken up at 2 a.m. thinking you might lose a loved one? I live with a sister who has Type 1 diabetes.
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Buy your own car, teenagers
Every teenager should purchase their own first car. Parents should not buy their children's cars or pay for their gas and insurance.
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Social Media: Swept up in the crowd
My three-month vacation was dedicated to nothing but the quest for knowledge. Now things are not the same. Something new, flashy and exciting has caught my eyes. And my ears. And my thumbs.
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Looking for GenWhy writers, photographers
Generation Why is looking for writing and photography from high school students in the five-county Record-Eagle coverage area.
Continued ... - Monday, March 5, 2012
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Drugs — how to kill and destroy lives
Cannabis destroyed my life. I smoked cannabis and it hasn't gotten me anywhere ... actually it has, but not in a good way.
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Diseased, their diseases, their families
Year in and year out, families get shaken up and their lives changed drastically by the agonizing diagnoses of the ones they love.
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Pro: DNA effective in solving crimes
As technology advances law enforcement personnel are gaining access to new methods of identifying suspects and convicting criminals. DNA testing is becoming extremely accurate.
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Con: Innocent don't belong in database
Law enforcement should not be able to collect the DNA from anyone unless they are convicted of a crime. Taking someone's DNA before they are convicted will force the suspect to be in the DNA database even if they are innocent.
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Looking for writers, photographers
Generation Why is looking for writing and photography from high school students in the five-county Record-Eagle coverage area.
Continued ... - Monday, February 6, 2012
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I'll use my words to explore
It is a funny thing, being a creative writer. I wanted to show my talent and illustrate exactly my love for the art of words in my essay. Alas, it was too long; clever, but long.
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Required reading changes relationships
First off, I am an avid reader. It is unusual that a book like "The Hunger Games" slipped under my radar for so long; I only had the opportunity to read it in my Science Fiction class as a required book.
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Despite backgrounds, I feel a connection
I stayed up almost past 1 a.m. in my room all alone, on a school night, flipping as fast as I could through the pages of "The Hunger Games," because I couldn't stand falling asleep without knowing how Katniss and Peeta escape the trap the Capitol set up for them.
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Genre crosses cultural lines
I have never been into science fiction; in fact, I have never read a book, nor watched a movie within this genre. I have never really figured out why people would want to make up things way out of our reality, and enjoy it.
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Looking for writers, photographers
Generation Why is looking for writing and photography from high school students in the five-county Record-Eagle coverage area.
Continued ... - Monday, December 5, 2011
- Seven years of 'train tracks' mold my future
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I'm growing up with the Great Lakes



