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Cell Phone Holdouts: It's Not 1990 Anymore

By LENORE SKENAZY | June 29, 2007

Today the iPhone debuts, further entrenching the device that has made us a nation of blabbing babies: the cell phone.

Not that I could live without mine.

Still, I found a surprising number of cell phone holdouts who somehow manage to get by without the dropped calls, infuriating static, post-work work and endless temptation to yak for the sake of yakking, usually while driving or having the following conversation:

"Hang on just a sec. Can you make that coffee light, no sugar? I am listening to you. You say you're getting a div — No sugar! Wait. What were we talking about? Oh yeah, so she walked out and — Can you break a ten?"

Holdouts will have none of this. In contemplating their righteous purity, we see the truth about our cell-addicted selves:

"If I were to get one, pretty soon I wouldn't be able to live without one," one holdout, Henry Stimpson, said, neatly nailing the biggest problem with cell phones: The way they turn previously independent individuals into the great unweaned.

"Typical incident," Mr. Stimpson said: "I went to a ballgame with a bunch of my friends and afterward all the other guys in the car were whipping out their phones and calling their wives. I don't need to call my wife! She knows I'm coming home."

Cell phones turn adults into babies, constantly needing contact with their spouses, friends, children. In fact, it's possible that children in a cell-connected world make out worst of all. This morning, not five minutes after I'd left for work, my 11-year-old called from the kitchen to ask if he could have banana bread for breakfast.

Kid – I'm not there. Eat ice cream and marshmallows. Make a vodka smoothie. Go wild or be a good boy, just pretend it's 1990 and I'm unreachable. With all of us connected all the time — "Mom, I'm on the bus," "Mom, I'm two blocks from home" — independence never gets a foothold.

Young adults fare no better. I have a friend whose daughter went shopping for her first college formal and sent her mom — 1,000 miles away — a photo of each dress as she tried it on.

Grow up! Buy a dress by yourself! And while we're at it, learn to make plans, too.

"I go to concerts all the time and my network of friends, they just don't know what to do when they confront somebody without a cell," a 27-year-old holdout, Briee Della Rocca, said. "They say, ‘Call me when you get to the parking lot and we'll meet up somewhere.' I say, ‘I don't have a cell phone. Let's plan in advance'—and the record stops. It's almost like they don't even consider that this is a potential option: To plan ahead."

Cell phones also allow their users to be late ("Almost there!") and opportunistic.

"Just this weekend, I'd met a woman at a party and I was just starting to talk when she got a phone call from a friend," comic Ian Coburn said. "The friend said, ‘Oh, those guys that Patty wanted us to meet are at that bar right now!'" And off she went to the other bar.

Rudeness and cell phones go together like blue-tooth and terminal hipness, which is just another reason many holdouts refuse to buy in. They don't want to be the one shouting "I said I'M IN A RESTAURANT" in a restaurant.

Neither do I but ... that might have been me. Or you. And though the holdouts don't realize it, eventually it might be them, too. Because it's not 1990 anymore.

And that iPhone looks pretty cool.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

You nailed it when you said rudeness and cell phones go together. All of this began in the 80's with... [MORE]

Bob Nolan 

Jun 29, 2007 05:39

No one has my number. I don't even know my number. If someone needs to reach me they can call... [MORE]

Sonni Standefer 

Jul 2, 2007 11:56

I don't have a cell phone. Once in a great while I need one and thanks to the generosity of... [MORE]

Jo Anne Brieff 

Jul 2, 2007 12:54

I was a cell -phone holdout for a while and my husband still is. All of this is true, and the... [MORE]

Mari 

Jun 29, 2007 13:39

Your article tells us more about people than it does about cellular telephones. The #1 reason given in divorse court... [MORE]

Kenneth Parady 

Jun 30, 2007 10:02

My husband and I have had cell phones for a few years now. We hardly use them. They do come... [MORE]

Diane 

Jun 30, 2007 16:51

Cell phones have their place but also are a hindrance. Driving and talking continuosly is one. Interruptions at stores and... [MORE]

Ira P. Antin 

Jun 30, 2007 17:02

i think using a cellphone while driving isnt a great idea, considering the amount of accidents that occur while doing... [MORE]

Jennifer 

Nov 28, 2007 15:34

its not safe or a smart thing to do [MORE]

Jennifer 

Nov 28, 2007 15:36

Somehow I happened on your article. I myself find the cell phone revolution a catch 22 and you nailed it... [MORE]

Mike 

Jul 1, 2007 21:49

I wish these devices never came into use. I personally don't like them very much. They are a dangerous distraction... [MORE]

Paul 

Jul 1, 2007 23:55

Same thing with me. I bought a pre-paid and only use it when neccessary or in emergencies and only pay... [MORE]

John 

Jul 4, 2007 04:17

So the writer can't live without her cell. Too bad. I say she should get a life. I have had... [MORE]

Lorraine 

Jul 2, 2007 20:18

Cell phones aren't the problem. The problem is people who have no manners whatsoever and feel the need to broadcast... [MORE]

Grimace 

Jul 3, 2007 12:05

I live in a narrow, deep valley that makes cell phone transmission impossible. Therefore I've never owned a cell. Once... [MORE]

Dave Charles 

Jul 3, 2007 18:23

I didn't want a cell phone, for a multitude of reasons, the largest being that I felt it would turn... [MORE]

Naomi 

Jul 3, 2007 21:34

I got a cell phone solely for the purpose of being able to call should I be stuck in traffic... [MORE]

Carolyn 

Jul 4, 2007 19:27

My sister is utterly incapable of planning ahead. Back in the BCP (Before Cell Phone) era, I'd try to plan... [MORE]

Imp 

Jul 5, 2007 15:49

I have a cell but don't use it. I got a really cheap plan from Sprint and it's only to... [MORE]

Natalie 

Jul 5, 2007 18:55

I disagree that cell phones decrease the quality of communication since it is each person's own decision how they want... [MORE]

Becci 

Aug 2, 2007 06:05