<p>Hounded by my internet-enabled smartphone, my computer with its Facebook memorabilia and my multi-faceted tablet, I decided to take a digital detox – complete abstinence from the virtual world for one entire afternoon! I wanted to savour and relish the natural joys and incumbent pleasures of real life where I would be close to idyllic nature. <br /><br /></p>.<p>I had planned my schedule for the afternoon – to go boating in Ulsoor lake, sit thoughtfully in the adjoining park and read the latest issue of ‘Teacher Plus’, and then write a poem for the Earth Day celebrations. Could the virtual world, I pondered, provide me with more amenable down-to-earth raw pleasures? A moot point, indeed!<br /><br />Switching off all my “virtual” gadgets and gizmos, I headed for the Ulsoor lake boating enclosure without my smartphone. There were a variety of boats, but I opted for a manually rowable one, with an assistant boatman.<br /><br />As the sun, like a huge torrid ball of fire, made its way across the azure blue sky dodging clouds that looked like fluffy cotton, I sat strategically in the centre of the boat. I took the oars and rowed rhythmically so that the boat slowly surged forward, slicing the waters on both sides into foamy, undulating waves. <br /><br />Though Ulsoor lake was recently in the news for a huge turnout of dead fish, I could not help noticing fishes playfully flitting in the water. I rowed past the secluded islands which boasted of trees, shrubs, bushes and creepers – all clamouring for sunlight. The myriad birds, flocked from tree to tree, their awesome beauty, unsurpassed. Minutes flew by, and it was now time to disembark.<br /><br />I sat in the adjoining park, happy to see some youngsters relishing a natural experience, too, devoid of virtual gizmos. I plonked on the grass, notebook in hand, trying to recapitulate all that I had observed about the trees, keen to pen a poem, ‘A Bengalurean Tree’. <br /><br />I wanted to write a rhyming poem, resonating with a staccato rhythmic beat. I thought of trees being both decorative and functional, with their fruits, flowers, seeds and barks being beneficial, they being able to live without us, but not us without them. Finally, I ended my juvenile attempt with the lines from an anonymous poet, “Poems are written by fools like me/ But only God can make a tree.”<br /><br />Feeling fresh and energised, I reached home only to be accosted by the ringing of my smartphone!<br /><br />“WhatsApp?” queried my virtually-addicted friend, Anita. “What’s up?” I said naively, “I went boating, admired trees and wrote a poem.”<br /><br />“Not ‘What’s up?’ but ‘WhatsApp’s new updates?” said Anita in dire exasperation. Without an iota of regret, I replied, “No, I haven’t downloaded them, and I don’t think I want to.”<br /><br />“What! And miss all the jokes, anecdotes, quotations, videos?” asked Anita in horror. “Anita,” I began, “Sometimes, savouring the world as it was before apps is quite refreshing. Three cheers for the real world – so different from the ‘reel’ world and the virtual world!”</p>
<p>Hounded by my internet-enabled smartphone, my computer with its Facebook memorabilia and my multi-faceted tablet, I decided to take a digital detox – complete abstinence from the virtual world for one entire afternoon! I wanted to savour and relish the natural joys and incumbent pleasures of real life where I would be close to idyllic nature. <br /><br /></p>.<p>I had planned my schedule for the afternoon – to go boating in Ulsoor lake, sit thoughtfully in the adjoining park and read the latest issue of ‘Teacher Plus’, and then write a poem for the Earth Day celebrations. Could the virtual world, I pondered, provide me with more amenable down-to-earth raw pleasures? A moot point, indeed!<br /><br />Switching off all my “virtual” gadgets and gizmos, I headed for the Ulsoor lake boating enclosure without my smartphone. There were a variety of boats, but I opted for a manually rowable one, with an assistant boatman.<br /><br />As the sun, like a huge torrid ball of fire, made its way across the azure blue sky dodging clouds that looked like fluffy cotton, I sat strategically in the centre of the boat. I took the oars and rowed rhythmically so that the boat slowly surged forward, slicing the waters on both sides into foamy, undulating waves. <br /><br />Though Ulsoor lake was recently in the news for a huge turnout of dead fish, I could not help noticing fishes playfully flitting in the water. I rowed past the secluded islands which boasted of trees, shrubs, bushes and creepers – all clamouring for sunlight. The myriad birds, flocked from tree to tree, their awesome beauty, unsurpassed. Minutes flew by, and it was now time to disembark.<br /><br />I sat in the adjoining park, happy to see some youngsters relishing a natural experience, too, devoid of virtual gizmos. I plonked on the grass, notebook in hand, trying to recapitulate all that I had observed about the trees, keen to pen a poem, ‘A Bengalurean Tree’. <br /><br />I wanted to write a rhyming poem, resonating with a staccato rhythmic beat. I thought of trees being both decorative and functional, with their fruits, flowers, seeds and barks being beneficial, they being able to live without us, but not us without them. Finally, I ended my juvenile attempt with the lines from an anonymous poet, “Poems are written by fools like me/ But only God can make a tree.”<br /><br />Feeling fresh and energised, I reached home only to be accosted by the ringing of my smartphone!<br /><br />“WhatsApp?” queried my virtually-addicted friend, Anita. “What’s up?” I said naively, “I went boating, admired trees and wrote a poem.”<br /><br />“Not ‘What’s up?’ but ‘WhatsApp’s new updates?” said Anita in dire exasperation. Without an iota of regret, I replied, “No, I haven’t downloaded them, and I don’t think I want to.”<br /><br />“What! And miss all the jokes, anecdotes, quotations, videos?” asked Anita in horror. “Anita,” I began, “Sometimes, savouring the world as it was before apps is quite refreshing. Three cheers for the real world – so different from the ‘reel’ world and the virtual world!”</p>