Using e-mail has every potential to harm our brains. In our modern world, it is not necessarily a choice to use a computer as a means of communication. After all, technology is an essential tool in our social circles. Indeed, e-mail has made communication much easier for the world, but it also wields the power to destroy our ability to think and live our lives. Our excessive reliance on e-mail has already transformed the way we allocate our valuable time for the worse.
Smartphones have allowed companies to become more productive by enabling employees to stay connected via e-mail. We can work anywhere, at any time, with access to e-mail. However, this 24/7 connection comes with its dire consequences.
Smartphones have made e-mailing and texting too convenient for most of us to resist. The invention of the Blackberry has cultivated a generation of “crackberry” addicts, notorious for checking e-mails and posting Facebook updates multiple times an hour. This culture of obsessive e-mail use causes problems that harm our brains. As a result, many now face social, mental and physical health problems.
By spending so much of our time inside our e-mail inboxes, we are developing social problems. E-mail has expanded work beyond the typical 9 to 5 job. Now, many employees are expected to be at job-related becks and calls any time of the day, which severely cuts into time otherwise spent with family and friends. The stress of overworking and the added duty of navigating through a flood of emails on a regular basis only make us less likely to set aside time for the people we care about.
Checking our e-mail has become the first priority in the morning and the last thing we have to do before we go to bed. As John Freeman, the author of the book The Tyranny of E-mail sees it, we feel rewarded when we receive an e-mail, for it is a reminder that other people acknowledge and somewhat value our existence. In fact, many of us crave to check our e-mails because of our desire to feel rewarded as often as we can.
There are also cases where people only like to communicate through email. They prefer to avoid any form of direct interaction, which results in a deterioration of their verbal communication skills over time—a skill highly essential in the world beyond cyberspace.
E-mailing on computers and phones for long periods of time is also harmful to our physical health. When we stare at our bright, high-contrast screens for many hours on end, it damages our eyes and gives us headaches.
Furthermore, it is more challenging to convey our emotions and intentions in an e-mail as opposed to talking face to face. What we write can often be misconstrued. Case-in point: sarcasm. Even with the full context of a conversation, sarcasm is not always understood. The perfect solution would be to always use a tag anytime we’re being sarcastic in an e-mail .
To top it all off, e-mail has left us dependent and vulnerable. Because most of our personal information is digitized, we no longer remember many of the small but important details in life: phone numbers, birthdays, meeting dates, even email addresses! Our brains are not getting the same level of exercise, which doesn’t bode well for a generation already associated with being lazy. We are also left very lost and helpless when our computers fail us during an emergency.
Our reliance on e-mail, in addition to the staggering amount of time that we as a society spend on it, is alarming for our health. While email has the potential to make us more productive, our extreme dependence on it consumes far too much of our time—time that can easily be used better.

