All things about the media, marketing, business, Japan and other musings by Mike in Tokyo Rogers.
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Thursday, March 29, 2012
Cellphone Radiation? Probably Worse For You Than Fukushima Because It's Stuck to Your Head!
That's right. Unless you live near or around the crippled Fukushima nuclear power plants, or the nearby areas affected, then there are many things that are much more dangerous to you and your families' well-being than crap spewing out of the Dai-ichi nuclear power plant.
People need to keep things in perspective. Of course the Fukushima nuclear accident is serious business. For me, I thank God I don't live there... Actually, no. That's not true. I thank me. I'd never live close to a nuclear power plant anyway. Neither would I live close to any sort of refinery, oil producing facilities or toxic waste dumps. I always questions the sanity of people who do... I always wonder why, when something bad happens, then the people who do live near these places complain as if they are surprised by disaster.
Seems to me disaster has a way of striking all around the world all the time.
Like I said, when it comes to your health and the welfare of your family, there's lots of things you should be concerned about... If you don't live near Fukushima then there's stuff going on all around you that just aren't as glamorous as nuclear accidents so they aren't reported by the main stream mass media, yet they have a much higher chance of ruining your health or your families' health than Fukushima ever could.
An excellent infographic has been released, which covers many of the physical and mental health problems, as well as the financial burden sold to an increasing number of people who feel they "cannot live without" a cell phone.
As shown below, this obsession manifests in a myriad of ways that affect individual health and social interaction....
There is one other area key area that is not covered in the infographic, but is also worth mentioning -- the radiation effects of cell phones, especially on the young.
Experts have said that cell phones are capable of causing a number of health problems, including depression, infertility and damage to your DNA.
Considering the hundreds of millions who live thousands of miles away from Fukushima with how much they have a radioactive device stuck to their head all day, I'd say that this issue demands some serious consideration.
Here's more details and facts from this very interesting infographic:
1) More people can't live without their cell phone:
* The average person glances at their cell phone 150 times a day
* 68% of people experience phantom phone vibration when anticipating a phone call or notification
* 43% of iPhone users would go shoeless for a week rather than temporarily release their phones
* 22% would forego brushing their teeth
* 73% of people sleep with their cell phones
2) This obsession can lead to mental and health problems
* Fear and anxiety can increase coagulation and increase heart disease by a factor of four
* 57% feel anxiety when they run out of battery or credit or have no network coverage
* 70% of women and 61% of men fear losing their phones (it's called "nomophobia" or "no mobile phone phobia")
* 50% feel anxious when they don't have their mobile phone with them
* 25% of nomophobia have experienced accidents while messaging or talking on the phone
3) Sleep deprivation
* People lose an average of 45 minutes a week of sleep due to cell phone usage
* 63% of smart phones users use a social networking site before going to bed
The article then goes on to suggest ways to fight back against cell phones (and I heartily agree!)
1) Turn off cell phones 45 minutes before bedtime to increase sleep quality
2) Take a trip unplugged! Go to where there is no TV, network or computers!
3) Resist constantly checking your cell phone for messages. If it's important, then they will call you
May I add?:
4) Turn it off at meal time
5) Turn it off during meetings and when you are not at work
6) Never use if for an alarm clock
7) Turn off your cell phone for 12 hours a day, everyday
Cell phones are bad news. Not only are they bad for your health, they are ruining people's quality of life.
One person commented to me that, "... they can't be as bad as breathing in Fukushima radiation..." To that another friend said, "No. You just shove them up a hole in your head and talk on them for hours..." Good point.
As I lay awake in bed trying to drift off to sleep I kept thinking of your admonishment to Not live anywhere near a coal plant or a nuke plant. But that got me to thinking, as I understand the way smoke stacks work, you can be 150 miles or more from a coal plant and Still be affected by it.
I imagine a small fire, stand close to it and you'll not be bothered by any smoke, unlike everyone downwind. So maybe proximity isn't the be all to end all?
I don't know.
In my area, if you want a job, you have to be where the smokestacks are,... for the most part. In my case, if I move thirty miles away I'm in an area which is very polluted from a corn processing plant, among others.
... There are no easy answers it seems. There is no escape?
And sometimes I think everyone should live where there are no mosquitoes,... I'm not sure I can get to Antarctica, nor survive there. Psft, and they probably have mosquitoes there too anyway?
Ok, now I can go back to bed and think about other things as I drift off to sleep. Like how families are being dismantled by just a sh...... of things.
What to do, what to do.
Perhaps I will just think about the photos in your blog post, The Ultimate Japanese Song and Karaoke: Four Minute Taste of the Essence of Japan: 浪花節だよ人生は,... that looked like fun. I'll bet they even knew how to play quarters and I wouldn't have to teach them. ... I did that once. At the time I felt great about it, now,... I kind of feel like I corrupted them.
Coal is going to kill me, but I have a plug in headset for the cell phone.
Comments must be succinct & relevant to the story. Comments are checked frequently and abusive, rude or profane comments will be deleted. I’m just one of many bloggers who answer questions online and sometimes for the press. I usually handle questions about Japan, marketing or the economy, so in those areas I’m more likely to make sense and less likely to say something really stupid. If I post something here that you find helpful or interesting, that’s wonderful. This is my personal blog. If you don't like what you have read here then, just like when you go into a restaurant or bar that allows smoking, if you don't like it, there's something at the front that has hinges on it and it is called a "door."
As I lay awake in bed trying to drift off to sleep I kept thinking of your admonishment to Not live anywhere near a coal plant or a nuke plant. But that got me to thinking, as I understand the way smoke stacks work, you can be 150 miles or more from a coal plant and Still be affected by it.
ReplyDeleteI imagine a small fire, stand close to it and you'll not be bothered by any smoke, unlike everyone downwind. So maybe proximity isn't the be all to end all?
I don't know.
In my area, if you want a job, you have to be where the smokestacks are,... for the most part. In my case, if I move thirty miles away I'm in an area which is very polluted from a corn processing plant, among others.
... There are no easy answers it seems. There is no escape?
And sometimes I think everyone should live where there are no mosquitoes,... I'm not sure I can get to Antarctica, nor survive there. Psft, and they probably have mosquitoes there too anyway?
Ok, now I can go back to bed and think about other things as I drift off to sleep. Like how families are being dismantled by just a sh...... of things.
What to do, what to do.
Perhaps I will just think about the photos in your blog post, The Ultimate Japanese Song and Karaoke: Four Minute Taste of the Essence of Japan: 浪花節だよ人生は,... that looked like fun. I'll bet they even knew how to play quarters and I wouldn't have to teach them. ... I did that once. At the time I felt great about it, now,... I kind of feel like I corrupted them.
Coal is going to kill me, but I have a plug in headset for the cell phone.
And the beat goes on...
- clark
what will be will be.
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