I actually have an iPhone. I got a smartphone for my business so I can take credit cards at public events. I wanted the easiest phone to use, and an easy-on-the-eyes background.
Then I discovered you can make phone calls with the iPhone, and if you’re lost and know the tool is there, you can even find yourself on the phone, and possibly get un-lost, if that’s even a condition. I even downloaded a song to play in a workshop I teach.
The iPhone is brilliant. I now understand why people like technology.
So why is the phone’s new TV campaign so poorly done?
So far I’ve seen two commercials. Each star a person—and their phone. In each, the person, one a woman, the other a man, seem engaging, dynamic, successful, and interested.
But they are having a relationship with their phone. They not only like it: they smugly relish it.
Did you notice that there are no other humans in these commercials? One lone human and their talking phone? Doesn’t that just creep you out?
Here’s a better idea: have a commercial in which different people talk to each other about something, sending directions, restaurant ideas, sight-seeing, whatever, but doing it together, all made easier by technology.
But let’s not have technology replace human interaction.
Oh, wait, we already did that. Let’s take it back. Stat.
(c) 2012 Robyn M Fritz
Needing to pack a mindful boost into your frenetic life? Try the little book, Pearls of Wisdom: 30 Inspirational Ideas to Live Your Best Life Now! It’s a compilation of short, inspirational essays offering simple, ageless wisdom and advice from well-known self-help authors to up-and-coming self-help authors.
When people come to meet me and Fallon, they want to know what he is. Fair enough.
Landmark days—those days that hold special meaning in our lives—are times to stop and celebrate and remember. They are the days that build families and communities—in multi-species families, they include adoption days, birthdays, breakthroughs, and deaths.
As the day progressed I realized that bald eagles were everywhere. In the few minutes I was in the back of our home their shadows swept the hillside. As I sat with Murphy and attended to my other dog, Alki, and Grace the Cat, they’d fly by, low enough for me to see their backs from our second story home. They glided by, and circled the trees at the light house across the street.
Late in the afternoon I left Murphy alone for 15 minutes to take Alki on a quick walk.
With Alki and with Grace the Cat. 
You’ll miss some of the mystery of life, some of the grace and glory of being fully present in your life, and in the life of those you love.

I saw to it that they were. I knew very well that most people would not have done the things I did for Murphy. I did not understand why, only that the human-animal bond meant something else to them.


