My Smartphone Problem

I have a stupid cell phone. All it does is make calls, text (no fancy keyboard) and provides me with some sort of limited internet which isn’t worth the cost.

Truth be told, I don’t use my cell phone that much.

Sure it’s useful when I need it but if I think about it, I don’t need it that often.

Recently I went to dinner with a friend. We were discussing cell phones (he has a blackberry). He says to me “you’re the only lawyer I know without one.” Which is kinda sorta true.

I’m no technophobe or anything. My problem is that I’m too plugged in. I have this blog, two email accounts, twitter, a Red Sox message board, and several hundred friends on facebook and a LinkedIn account to boot.

Mike from The Truth About Mike writes that the iPhone changes lives. I believe him and therein lies my problem.

In the history of humankind, the iPhone is the coolest thing ever.

This past Christmas, I flirted with the iPhone and wound up taking home its slightly less attractive sister: the iPod touch. I think the iPod touch is the second coolest thing ever invented. The device is amazing.

I have to admit though that I put one foot in the water by purchasing the iPod Touch. I wanted remote internet access. The iPod Touch allows that anywhere there is wifi. It could be free wifi like at Staples or Panera or any unsecured network within a few hundred feet.

But the iPod Touch doesn’t let me get my email everywhere. I think it would be cool to get the interweb everywhere.  That thought makes me a brat. I don’t need the internet everywhere.

One of the reasons that I got the Touch was that I didn’t want to be found everywhere. I wanted to enjoy the baseball game and not tweet about how I’m at Fenway Park. No one needs to update his or her facebook status everytime they go somewhere new. I am smart enough to realize that the iPhone would separate me from things and people that I love and I wasn’t ready to go there.

I realize that cell phones as we know them or as I have are about to be obsolete. The iPhone blows the socks off of everything else and things are only going to get better from here on out. 

Sometimes there’s a voice in my head that is so crazy it tells me “a smartphone will make me a better lawyer.” But that’s nonsense.  No one needs one. Most of my clients’ problems can wait for me to walk the dog, go out with friends, or watch a ball game. I make myself very accessible to my clients and promptly answer their calls and return emails but I like a boundary. Moreover, I need a boundary.

I need to be away from the internet. It’s good to be missed and miss.

A smartphone, be it an iPhone or a Blackberry both opens and shuts doors in life. I know I’ll cave and get one. 

For now, and by now, I mean this second, I think my life is better with my plain, nearly 2 year old, cell phone.

Ryan McKeen is a trial attorney at Connecticut Trial Firm, LLC in Glastonbury, Connecticut. In 2016, he was honored by the CT Personal Injury Hall of Fame for securing one of the highest settlements in the state. He is a New Leader in the Law. ABA 100. Avvo 10. 40 under 40 for Hartford Business Journal. He has been quoted in Time Magazine, the New York Times, Hartford Courant, Wall Street Journal Law Blog and the Hartford Business Journal. He focuses his practice on Connecticut Personal Injury law. He loves what he does. Contact him ryan@cttrialfirm.com or 860 471 8333

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