Yesterday I walked more than 12,500 steps. How do I know
this? My smartphone told me so. That phone knows a lot about me, maybe even
more than I want it to know. But I’m not upset that it knows how many steps I
took yesterday, and I even graciously accepted the “virtual” medal that was
posted in an email to my phone, congratulating me on having more than met my steps
goal for the day.
No, I didn’t actually establish that goal. A small computer snapped
into a band on my wrist set the goal, which was 10,000 steps. If I meet the
goal, the computer gives me a tingle on my wrist that is both a little shocking
and a little satisfying. I’m happy to know that at least something on my body
is tingling these days.
On many days, however, the wrist computer is more ambitious
than I am. Many days, I come up short of my goal. In that case, I don’t receive
a virtual medal or a tingle, but luckily I don’t receive a shocking rebuke
either. At midnight, the computer just begins counting all over again. If I
happen to walk in my sleep (perhaps making a small jaunt to the bathroom, for
instance), I might find that I have taken 50 or more steps even before I consciously
begin a new day. The step total that appears on an app on my smartphone is a
sign that I am being tracked by an outside force occupying my wrist. That idea
doesn’t always make me tingle.
There is no great mystery here. The small computer is part
of the present I received from my children for Father’s Day. It’s called a
Fitbit. It’s an exercise monitor that fits into a band on your wrist. My Fitbit
looks sort of like that Lance Armstrong Livestrong band that is now out of
favor. But mine is black instead of yellow. Other people wear colored wrist
bands that have other meanings and signify other causes. Mine is just there to
keep track of my efforts to be more fit, which is a pretty noble cause in
itself.
More than a quarter of the way toward today's goal. Am I going to tingle? |
Now, things were going fine between my Fitbit and me for
several days. It encouraged me to walk more and sit a little less. And I was
pretty happy to see that walking on the treadmill, even at a moderate pace,
caused my step total to go up quickly, as long as my wrist stayed in motion. So
I walked just a little longer. (Then I noted that by just swinging my wrist,
even without taking an actual step, the numbers would go up. I logged that
information into my memory bank for future reference.)
Then, something strange happened.
On my fifth day of wearing the Fitbit, I received a very
disturbing email. The email read:
“Hi Michael G.,
Your Flex battery level is low. Charge your battery as soon as possible.”
Your Flex battery level is low. Charge your battery as soon as possible.”
The
message went on to describe how I could charge my battery, and ended with the
cheerful closing: “Happy Stepping!”
The
message was friendly enough, but I didn’t feel really happy. It dawned on me
that I had truly and voluntarily stepped into the world of “Big Brother” 10,000
steps at a time. I was being tracked by a machine that could not only give me
tingles and virtual medals but also make me feel bad about not treating it
properly. I had let down my Fitbit. That thought caused me more anguish than it
should have. Suddenly, I began to worry that my Fitbit might start
communicating with other machines in my life, sharing possible shortcomings or
even (shudder!) secrets. What if, for example, my Fitbit and the bathroom scale
began conversing with each other. What if both of them told my “Weight Watchers”
app that I had understated my actual poundage on weigh-in day this week, just so I could get an encouraging message
urging me to “keep up the good work.”
An
old poem many of us memorized in high school goes,
“I am the master of my fate,
I
am the captain of my soul.”
Sadly that message
doesn’t really ring true for those of us living in the age when our tools and
toys can talk to each other about us.
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