For any readers expecting skin — let me dissuade you now — no skin in this post. Naked has connotations beyond the body stripped bare of clothes, it points to times of vulnerability and being leaving the mind exposed to the world. It’s in this vain that I was riding naked.
I spent two days without my iPhone; unplugged, disconnected, cut off from the world and I have to admit I felt uncomfortable, a bit anxious, and sensed the obsessive nature of my relationship with the thing.
It wasn’t until Friday night until I realized I had left the phone on my desk at work when in a moment of boredom I attempted to fill the void with headlines from Google News. Without the phone my easy access to time, weather and calendar was gone. No quick glimpse of email to make sure there was nothing to attend to for work. As the evening progressed I found myself feeling as if I was missing something, that life was going on without me. All because the little device was not with me.
While doing errands on Saturday I was like a stranger in a strange land as I noticed how many people were walking through the grocery store looking at their phones, tapping into an unseen flow of energy that kept them safe and content.
Like a drug.
I would find out later that my wife tried to reach me by phone and text. The assumed reliable access is gone when you don’t have a cellphone with you. I found myself wondering when I surrendered my independence for the safe enslavement of a smartphone? I remember not having one and feeling just as safe on a trip as I do now even though a breakdown would require reaching out to fellow travelers for help. Seems frightening today.
I have no illusions when it comes to riding adventure. I don’t believe it exists anymore, at least not the idea in my head of the rugged individual facing the world alone. Today every rider I know has the convenient smartphone lifeline that provides access to support, maps, directions, weather and more.
But wouldn’t the real adventure be to leave the phone, the GPS, the tablet and whatever other network connection you have at home? Certainly would force a person to consider the road differently. I suspect the ride would be more challenging and the experience more intimate. Looking at a map is different that following a dot of a digital screen.
I would like to say I am going to leave my iPhone at home but I know I won’t. I can’t. I need it. But I also know that having one and using it daily leaves a person with an addiction to the thing, especially if you take a lot of hits from it. That I can do something about.
Right now I’m powerless over my iPhone so I can’t ride naked.











