Wasting time online? You might be mentally ill

Mon Jul 28, 2008 2:05PM EDT

See Comments (41)

It's always there. Waiting and calling to you. Fark. Reddit. Facebook. Dolphin Olympics. It may take only a couple minutes out of your day, but you know you're wasting time on this stuff whether you should be working on that spreadsheet or washing the dishes.

Time-wasting, or rather "chronic procrastination," is hardly a laughing matter, according to Professor Joseph Ferrari of Chicago's DePaul University. According to an insightful story in UK's Observer, it's a profound "social and economic" problem and, thanks to technology, it's far worse than you could ever imagine.

Procrastination isn't just idle laziness. There are real social consequences to wasting time. Per the story, "it encourages depression, lowers self-esteem, causes insomnia, and indirectly affects health by discouraging visits to the dentist or doctor. Sufferers are also more likely to have accidents at home involving unmended appliances." Makes sense if you think about it.

Of course, it's the economic impact that has businesses more concerned. Distractions aren't just limited to the lure of the web. That little chime that rings when an email message arrives, says research from Calgary University, causes a 0.5 percent drop in the Gross Domestic Product here in the United States, costing the country $70 billion a year, as employees are distracted from the task they're supposed to be focused on.

Tech is the real driver in this trend, which now impacts 1 in 4 people, up from 1 in 20 a few decades ago. But some scientists say procrastination is hard wired in our brains: People have always wasted time, and evolution may be responsible for developing an "automatic response" mechanism inside us, one which innately told us to drop the cave painting and run if a tiger came sniffing around the cave.

On the other hand, some say procrastination is still useful in tiger-free times: Earlier this year one study found that personal web use (including video games and social networking) helps employees get their jobs done more efficiently (and raises profits) by fostering a "trusting" environment and helping staffers feel at ease in the workplace. Obviously there's a fine line between "wasting time" and "taking a little break." Where that line actually falls remains a mystery.

Now stop reading blogs and get back to work.

LINK: Hi-tech is turning us all into time-wasters

Comments on Wasting time online? You might be mentally ill

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  • 6 Posted by tuuli667 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:25PM EDT Report Abuse

    It's not that I want to spend time online, but it really takes all of my times to check all of my 200 websites that I'm on. I'm on at least a dozen microblogging sites and updating them all is a ----- . ;)

  • 7 Posted by wall-e@att.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    How funny as people of the world learn just how dishonest Americans are China should shun all works of any microsoft,aol,yahoo,and google as not in the best interest of your country and Idia unless you want your children listening to america filth boycott their services is your best interest .Their music is all computer made and the web sites is nothing but liars committing consumer fraud then in return they blame your nations for their acts....

  • 8 Posted by jblackfield08 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:30PM EDT Report Abuse

    this article was well worth my time! haha Oo yahoo. Overall: sure, surfing the web when your suppose to be working is bad and might hurt the company. A company or the economy wont be destroyed or suffer statistically because of our "addictions". One more time, bah -Procrastinators Unite Tomorrow!!!!!!

  • 9 Posted by zobyjade@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 11:01PM EDT Report Abuse

    i don't feel that being online is a waste of time..i find alot of good useful info just at a click of the mouse...from gardening, to home repairs,and cooking....well okay,,the sink is clogged and dinner will be late but i found a web site that explains how to do both..... : )

  • 10 Posted by deatarus on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:39PM EDT Report Abuse

    Hey! now I've been putting a lot of effort in becoming a great part of that 70 Billion.... seriously.... I spend half my time at work surfing around....

  • 11 Posted by rogueist on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    LOL - I wonder if anyone ever got around to examining the people who spend the time to come up with labels to stick on people's behavior - they might be the ones that are actually mentally ill, and the rest of us might be totally sane!

  • 12 Posted by thesonicguy93 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:05PM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm online all the time I don't think I'm mentally ill, But the last time I cleaned the house was weeks ago. :P

  • 13 Posted by sfowler313 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    I think "mentally ill" is a harsh way to describe procrastination. I hate to use such a trite phrase but everybody's doing it. And everyone always has. It's human nature. People put off things until they can't put it off anymore. Modern technology just gives us an abundant amount of ways to procrasinate. Before the internet there was T.V. sets and before home T.V. sets there was live theater and before that I'm sure sex took peoples' minds off many tasks at hand. Right?

  • 14 Posted by oxmorena on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Haha. I was babied my whole life by my mom and dad.. :) So, when college came around I was screwed. lol I always said "I'll do it in a minute."

  • 15 Posted by oxmorena on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Haha. I was babied my whole life by my mom and dad.. :) So, when college came around I was screwed. lol I always said "I'll do it in a minute."

  • 16 Posted by dougfoulds on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Poor business? Losing billions per year? What are we here for the corporations profits? Who writes this stuff? email your wife that you want to take her and the kids out to dinner tonight on the corporate card, see if your life improves.

  • 17 Posted by notnowdear88 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    I disagree with Joe's theory. This is no more harmful than a person's mental occupation of religion or in the pursuit of making money. There are people who thirst for knowledge and they are internet users. Joe is just endorsing the corporate-owned slavery that is the current trend in employers these days. I say if these employers want brainless slaves, then let them get them from south of our borders or outsource them.

  • 20 Posted by mc4932 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    I posted a comment over a week ago that took some time and was a serious one. Alas, it was not posted, yet the confirmation said my comment was received. It's as if the author chose not to post it. Thanks for a delightfully ironic waste of time.

  • 21 Posted by jinx4848 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    and yet tech grows the GDP hundreds of billions of dollars per year, so it's a net gain. If it wasn't "procrastination", there would be another social problem that would be keeping humans from running 100% efficiently.. get over it.

  • 22 Posted by agentcertsvcs on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    ok, so reading the article meant i was wasting time, therefore, the article enabled facilitated my addiction. Causing me to act out on my symptoms by clicking to read more, elsewhere. . I think wasting time reading internet articles is far more productive use of my time than writing them and not getting paid for them. Like blogs, People write bloggs because they think their opinion matters and then other people think their opinion matters, and we are all addicted, writers, readers, Even our president.... Whats goin on in my Facebook pages.....

  • 23 Posted by cecdlary on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    Nonsense, being online is not a waste of time, it is how productive you are as a member of society with the knowledge to acquire. It you do not utilize the knowledge or just look at junk, then I could see it, but fellow bloggers, be productive, be it looking at porn or looking up your favorite topic, be productive.

  • 24 Posted by hotgrams8 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    I don't at all think that the computer is making us mentally ill. As a matter of fact, it is a brain stimulator since we can gather so much information about anything and everything. It got me a job as well!!! Oh yes, I love the games too. Very brain stimulating and educational!!! In fact, I'm smarter now than I ever was! Wasting time??? Not at all.........I don't like dusting and vaccuuming anyway!! "That's" a waste of time!!! Non-educational as well!

  • 25 Posted by cecdlary on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    Time on the computer cannot be construed as being mentally ill. How could a mentally ill person figure out how to turn the computer on, or how could one acquire knowledge. Just think 20 years ago, before the Internet, and when the only computers out there were the Tandy TRS80's that took the cassette tape to store data, and 45 minutes to boot the system was a real waste of time, so think about it people on how productive we are now.

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