Let’s Stop Judging People for Using Phones Outdoors
Tech shaming has made us believe that the outdoor experience has to be pure or nothing. Here's why you should absolve your guilt about using your gadgets in nature.
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Not long ago, I was talking to someone about running. This guy was a Runner with a capital R:devoted, meticulous, hardcore. He wore his identity on his sleeve, literally—I think I’ve only ever seen him in Tracksmith tees and singlets—and in the past, his opinion on the sport had beenone I’dsought to validate my own.
I mentioned how I’d gotten into listening to podcasts to help me slog through long, slow runs. The Runner scoffed. “You need that stuff to run?” he asked.
I found myself backpedaling, almost apologetic for listening to on a ten-miler rather than doing it sans distractions.
Days later, while lacing up for an hour-plus jog, I paused before grabbing my AirPods.
His comment was making me question myself, but I was also questioning the assumption it was based on. Why was running in silencethe right way? How did we determine that using technology to supplement, facilitate, or complement an outdoor activity was bad? And should I feel guilty about using it?
Tech Shaming Is Everywhere and It’s Bumming Us Out
“That is not something I’m ever going to apologize about.”
This is Sarah Mary Cunningham,recalling a recent, difficult conversation she had about using her phone on a hike in New York’s Catskill Mountains. “I was talking to another hiker—a purist—and I said something about using AllTrails and texting on the trail. And he was like, ‘You should really be developing your inner compass, not looking at your phone,’” Cunningham remembers.
The New York City music publicist is no greenhorn when it comes tothe outdoors—she regularly hikes, kayaks, runs on trails, and is currently gunning for the (she’s bagged three so far). She told the man, “I’m a woman, and I’m going on this trail by myself—I look at AllTrails to see how that trail is mappedand to text my friend that I’m doing this trip and check in with herand let her know when I’m back at my car.” Was she staring at her phone the entire time? “No!” Cunningham laughs. “I’d be tripping over tree branches or roots.”
The real burn to Cunningham, and to anyone who has been similarly judged for using technology outdoors, is the implication that if you needan app or a gadget to help you through a hike, jog, or any other activity, you’re somehow less of an outdoorperson or athlete.
Tech shaming has been our judgment du jour for years now. (As put it, “It’s popular these days—as it has been any time a new type of technology has become widely used—to talk about how ‘sad’ it is that so many people are on their phone or on social media rather than ‘really socializing with people.’”) But tech shaming has a uniquely prevalent position in the outdoors.
We’ve all seen and heard the self-righteous and judgy looks, comments, and social-media posts about the way people use technology outside. (A quick Twitter search will yield gems like“” and“‘”) The ridicule has gotten so bad that, thisyear, the nonprofit organization (which calls itself the Center for Outdoor Ethics) had to to include “Shaming Is Not the Answer.” The grouphad noticedan increasing number of nasty comments with #LeaveNoTrace hashtags aimed at people who were obliviously using smartphones, cameras, and other gadgets in nature.
At best, these judgments suck. At worst, they’re making people less likely to get outside. What’s more, those hardest hit by tech shaming are often newbies—peoplewho are just dipping a toe into hiking, cycling, running, or backpackingand who may be more easily discouraged after hearing something like,“You need that?” These are also the folks who may benefit the most from tools like mapping apps and motivating music.
So Why Do We Judge?
Almost always, someone who wears AirPods on a run, watches Netflix while camping, or hauls a selfie stick up the trail isn’t hurting anyone or detracting from someone else’s good time outside. There’s even some nascent evidence to show that they’re not detracting from their own good time. from the University of Northern Colorado, 73 people—mostly hikers and campers—completed a questionnaire that gauged what effects, if any, technology use had on their enjoyment of outdoor experiences. The verdict: nomatter how much technology people used, it had no bearing on how happy, relaxed, or satisfied they were with their outdoor experiences.
So why do we judge?
“There’s natural tribalism happening here.Anyone who does something a certain way will surround themselves with others who do something a certain way—and then, together, they protect that way,” says , a digital anthropologistand author of the 2019 book , an instructional on how to live alongside technology. “Because of the cognitive biases that we all have, our way is the right way. It’s the same thing you see playing out in politics.”
Ironically, one reason why we feel comfortable policing others about their tech use stems from the insular worlds we’ve crafted for ourselves on social media, Solis adds. If it really pisses you off to pass someone on a hike who’s lost in his phone, and you air that grievance on Facebook, chances are your like-minded community will echo and amplify your beliefs, and you’ll double down on your anger. “We live in a highly emotional world that is charged by the nature of our technology—social media essentially converts us into accidental narcissists,” Solis says.
Still, technologyand judgments for using itare nothing new in the outdoors. (Thirty years ago, people were probably saying, “Hey, is that a Walkman? You’re running with a Walkman?”) “The truth is, it’s not just tech shaming. For as long as there’s been outdoor recreation, there’s been gatekeeping and some level of shaming,” says Ron Schneidermann, CEO of the navigational app . “Whether it’s skiing, biking, hiking, climbing, surfing, hunting, even camping, there’s always someone who’s anointed himself—and let’s be real, it’s almost always a he—and made it his purpose to tell you that, if you don’t meet his standards, you don’t belong.” (Schneidermann has experienced his fair share of being tech-shamed while hiking and using his own app.)
What’s different about 2019—and why there’s no merrier bandwagon to ride than that of digital detox or the #offthegrid mantra—is that we’ve hit technological saturation in every corner of our lives. We spend 6.5 hours daily on the internet, the average office worker , and just try to think of the last time you went 24 hours without interacting with your phone. We’re over it! We want our peace in the outdoors! And we want everyone else to abide that, too.
The problem is thatsomepeople have become so wedded to the idea of the outdoors as a haven away from digital demands that even seeinga smartphone in the wildernessor witnessing someone carrying an iPad on a beachcan feel disruptive, says , a professor of psychology at George Mason University who has spent more than 15 years digging into the science of what drives our emotions. “My guess is that most of these people are not consciously aware of it, but when they see someone holding a phone [outside] somewhere,they think, You just reminded me of all these things I have to do,” says Kashdan. “You reminded me of all these tasks that I have disbanded for a short period of time to go out into nature, so to some degree, you’re pissing me off.”
But the fact that this happens is another symptom of our overall state of confusion about the role technology should play in our lives, says , a computer-science professor at Georgetown University. Newport writes about the intersection of technology and cultureand the question of how much tech is too muchin his new book, .“If you’ve decided that your time outside is when you get away from [tech], it’s kind of like a Band-Aid cure to the bigger problem,” he says. In other words, if the only way you can get mental space away from technology is by physically separating yourself from it—making the outdoors your no-screen zone,for instance—then you’re probably using too much tech in the first place. (Not to mention that fulfilling your need for a digital catharsis is an awful lot of pressure to put on Mother Nature.) This is basically the premise of Newport’s book, in which he gives a handy, accessible guide to help you weed technology from your everyday life.
Of course, there’s a difference between getting pissed off that someone’s wearing headphones on a run or using a smartphone to navigate a trail and feeling that way when someone’s flying a drone over your campsite or blasting music to every hiker on the mountain. The latter, invasive kind of digital interruptions, are becoming more and more common. Yet even in the eyes of Leave No Trace,there’s no clear rule onwhat shouldn’t be used or how.
“I think this can be frustrating for some people, because we’re not saying, ‘This or that,’” says Dana Watts, executive director at Leave No Trace. What it comes down to is pretty basic, Watts says: draw the line at what mightreasonably impede someone else’s experience.
Technology Can Be an Outdoor Enhancer
What often goes missing in the debate about using technology in nature is just how much better our devices can make the experiences. Tech can seamlessly complement and amplify our adventures, workouts, and even the inspiration we get from armchair-viewing incredible outdoor pursuits.
Take, for instance, the apps and programs that allow us to identify in the night sky, in the forest, in canyons,and (and what’s edible and not). These tools make our time outside more engagingand deepen our knowledge. And recent research conducted on children—our most impressionable, attention-challenged demographic—indicate that the screens don’t distract us from the natural world. In , Canadian researchers created a nature app for wetland, tropical-garden, and prairie-grassland parks, then randomly assigned 747 kids to three different groups. One group toured the parks using the app, one listened to a guide, and the third read a paper map. Afterwardthe children were to determine how engaged they were with nature, how much information they had retained, and how much they enjoyed the overall experience. The app was just as effective at connecting the kids to nature as traditional methods, and, the researchers noted, the kids thought itwas a lot more fun.
Modern technology has also smashed a basic barrier for many new enthusiasts: finding the way. Navigational apps like AllTrails and not only help people find fresh routes to explore—which is fun on its own—but they guide them downtrails that previously required having an in-the-know friend, agatekeeping effect. Apps like these opened up more of the wilderness to everyone.
There’s also a crucial safety element to consider: many apps, including and , offer SOS alerts that users can activate to send messages to their loved ones or rescue crews in case of emergency. And of course, just having a phone on you meansyou can call for helpor, if you’re lost, navigate back to your home or vehicle (assuming service is available, naturally). Such basic, vital features are probably part of the reason a from Brigham Young University found that 95 percent of people prefer to hike with their smartphones.(However, oneflip side of all this bears noting: some people say that running with earbuds is unsafe, when passing othersor for simple awareness.)
Furthermore, from a social-media perspective, shooting photos and video footage for Instagram, Snapchat, and TikTok is how a ton of people celebrate being outsideand encourage others to get outdoors, too. The latter is working, particularly for millennials; as the Seattle Times : “Nationally, interest in hiking has doubledamong those 18 to 34, surging from a participation rate of 15 percent in 2008 to 30 percent last year.” The Times article attributed the surge, in large part, to “the Instagram effect,” pointingto data from Nielsen that said hikers are 43 percent more likely than nonhikers to have used Instagram in the past 30 days. And in contrast to the popular belief that whipping out your phone to snap pics on a hike takes you out of the moment, from the American Psychological Associationfound that taking photos can actually increase your enjoyment of the experience. Researchers reasonthat when you’re thinking about what image you want to capture, you’re engaging and connecting even more with your surroundings.
There’s also an inclusion benefit: social media has created an opportunity to widen and deepen the outdoor community, helping everyone feel more welcome and have more fun. This has been true for Cunningham, the Seven Summit seeker. “My favorite Instagram account in the world right now is that guy who does drag in the outdoors to raise attention for self-love and the LGBTQ+ community,” she says. “Or .It’s everyone from people of color, to people who are plus-size, to people who are differently abled.” That representation has been bolstered thanks topeople recreatingoutside on their phones.
And for those who regularly get out and sweat in nature, consider the science showing thatdonning earbuds to listen to music can vastly improve workouts. from Keele University in England found that queueingour favorite songs can help us achieve a flow state, particularly during training; the music helps us drone out any nagging mental doubts and dial in to an efficient exercise groove that makes the work feel less hard, improves our performance, and boosts our enjoyment of the activity.
Even the inspiration we get from top outdoor athletes to tackle new adventures has been brought to us with the help of technology. Look at professional alpinists Adrian Ballinger and Cory Richards. When the duo made summit attempts of Mount Everestwithout supplemental oxygen in 2016 and 2017, they documented each challenge, setback, and eventual victory viaSnapchat, with the hashtag #EverestNoFilter. Their photos, video messages, and real-time updates—which also appeared on Facebook, Instagram, Strava, and YouTube—made for gripping storytelling and a passenger-side view of climbing the world’s highest peak that few had seen before. Thanks to it, amateur mountaineers had fresh motivation to pursuetheir own epics.
With these myriad benefits, the traditional premise that outdoor recreation is best experienced with only your own senses, sans phones, screens, and gadgets, seems deeply outdated.
You Don’t Always Need Nature to Get Away
Science does show us that the outdoor purists are absolutely right about one thing: experiencing solitude is vital.
“Take every moment that you’re listening to something, reading something, reacting with something on a phone—that puts your brain in a highly artificial state that tends to make people frazzled and anxious,” says Newport, the digital-minimalism expert. There’s a great advantage to spending moments free of input from others on a regular basis, he says. This is what solitude actually is: time spent with only your own thoughts and the stimuli from the world around you. Moments like these help cut any anxiety you may have andarethe kind of operating mode our brains feel most comfortable in, Newport says.
This is likely why taking time away from our screens feels so therapeuticand why the outdoors—a place with its own inherently fascinating and calming stimuliand a space that naturally evokes contemplation—is such a good spot to create a state of solitude. And maybe this is what gives the most ardent outdoor gatekeepers an involuntary twitch when they see the selfie stick emerge from akayak or watch aniPad lightup around the campfire.“What people may be thinking is: theonly time to get the benefit of solitude is when you’re outdoors—so don’t waste it,” Newport says. “But in actuality, you have more flexibility than you would suspect.”
We don’t have to be perched on a quiet peak alone at sunset to tap into this solitude. We can find these moments anywhere, doing anything. “People often mistakenly attribute solitude to requiring physical isolation, but that has nothing to do with it,” Newport says. “It could happen just as easily in line in a store, in the coffee shop, in a subway car. That can be just as valuable as on the trail. There’s nothing particularly privileged about being outdoors for solitude.”
I gazed out my back-porch window, thinking about all of that, alone with my thoughts, for a good long while this morning. Then I put in my AirPods and went outside for a run.
Illustration by Michael Parkin/Folio Art