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Balancing life and technology: It's Dot Complicated

Are you a digital hoarder? Does your e-mail clutter rival your closet? Balancing life and technology isn't something that comes naturally – it's a skill to be learned. 

The more technology becomes a part of our lives, this blogger says the more we yearn for tactile or outdoors experiences. The Juhl family takes a hiking break near Angel’s Rest near Bridal Veil, Ore., April 27, 2013.

Graham Kislingbury/AP Photo/The Democrat Herald

July 25, 2013

For all the ease and wonder that technology has granted us, how many times have you lamented that it’s also made life more complicated?

We deal with tremendous amounts of email clutter to rival our closet clutter. We wonder if our kids are experiencing too much technology too soon, and at what expense. We find ourselves bleary-eyed and twitchy-fingered as we check various online news outlets and eventsÌýone more time, for fear of missing something important. We reveal a little too much to our co-workers and about ourselves and our significant others.

For fleeting moments, the life of a few decades ago appears so much simpler.

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People had time to compose long letters at writing desks; to visit with friends, make lovely meals, and play simple games by a lake or a hearth. Of course, it’s easy to romanticize such a life as well. When so much of the world is literally at our fingertips, it can be tricky to choose which aspects of technology and modernity to embrace and which to let go of to make room for that which is simple, personal, tactile, and ultimately leads to a fulfilling and connected life.

This is the spirit with whichÌýÌý±ô²¹³Ü²Ô³¦³ó±ð»åÌý, an online community that aims to help us explore and untangle our modern, wired lives — together.

I had the great fortune of meeting Randi and a few like-minded fellow bloggers at a lovely luncheon, and then I got to return to theÌýÌýStudios, to chat with Randi, Beth Blecherman ofÌý, video bloggerÌýÌýandÌýVeena Goel Crownholm ofÌý.ÌýThe conversation was wonderful and warm, ranging from our attempts to untangle and manage our lives and households to the ways in which we find happiness and take care of ourselves.

You can see ourÌý.

I also had a short session with Randi, in which I sharedÌý, one of the 300+ projects inÌýÌýwhich are designed to give families ideas and instructions for simple activities, many of which can be done spontaneously and with little equipment on a free afternoon or during a low-key gathering. The paper boat was one of our favorite things to make as a family and sail, either in a local creek or a bathtub. I recently got to shareÌýÌýwith a younger generation of boat-makers, which was delightful, and which I recounted for Randi.

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Often us parents think we have to plan unusual, elaborate, or expensive activities for our kids. Many of us would be surprised at the simple activities and small moments that instead become our children’s fondest memories. Sailing paper boats is one such example for us. Others include picking fruit on long summer days and coming home and makingÌý, mixing a bucket of bubble solution and enjoyingÌýÌýfor days, playingÌýÌýin the park, making and eatingÌý, keeping aÌý, and watching the night sky forÌý.

I believe that the more technological our lives become, the more we yearn for tactile activities like crafts and cooking, as well as activities that help us gather in families and communities to experience the wonder of the seasons and the natural world and to bond through important play time, down time, and family time.

For more simple, fun, and memorable things to do with your kids this summer (and a couple of attitudinal changes that might help make summer go more smoothly and joyfully) see my Dot Complicated blog,Ìý.

Looking for still more simple, even retro, family fun? SeeÌý.

Thanks again to Randi and everyone at Dot Complicated for being such an important voice for simplifying our lives and for bringing together so many wise and passionate people who desire the same thing.

º£½Ç´óÉñ has assembled a diverse group of the best family and parenting bloggers out there. Our contributing and guest bloggers are not employed or directed by the Monitor, and the views expressed are the bloggers' own, as is responsibility for the content of their blogs. Susan Sachs Lipman blogs atÌý.