As we all get pulled in so many directions in our daily lives, it鈥檚 easy to think that technology is the holy grail, an organizing tool to give our lives direction, to help us multitask, and to connect us to everyone, near and far.

But聽is that really the case?聽

I鈥檝e lately been pondering whether many of us are losing track of the need to 鈥渟top and smell the roses,鈥 as the clich茅 goes.

Technology is a wonderful connecting toy, and we have many of those toys to choose from 鈥 desktop and laptop computers, mobile devices, tablets, you name it. Most of us have several of them.

But what鈥檚 happened to the idea of just turning away from all of that and just relishing the time we have with those around us? Or, heaven forbid, just being by ourselves for a while and thinking?

As part of an interactive-entertainment class that I teach in my digital media courses at 麻豆原创, there is a reality-to-virtuality continuum graph that we discuss. The graph demonstrates that our imagination can be stimulated along a range of physical to virtual experiences. Alongside physical things such as theme parks and magic shows, and virtual things such as films, and a mixture of both in “augmented reality,” there is a spot called “lucid dreaming.”

When students see that, there is invariably a laugh from most and we move on.聽But lucid dreaming may in fact be the most intriguing spot on that continuum.聽For it鈥檚 the one spot where we as humans release ourselves from technology, conventions, and social norms 鈥 and just think. We allow our brains to disconnect with deadlines and responsibilities and just take us wherever our imagination leads us.

So what鈥檚 the 鈥渕ain thing鈥 I mention in my column headline? Well, in my聽mind, it鈥檚 remembering that we only go through this life once.聽For every new technology that we get attached to, are we using it to make that one trip through life richer, more meaningful, more important to our journey?聽Not usually.

Many times, that technology is just used to fill time 鈥 as though we have time to spare, which we don’t. We don鈥檛 know how much time we have left in this life, and as the Tim McGraw song says, 鈥淟ive like you were dying.鈥澛

This topic might read to some as slightly morbid;聽it鈥檚 not meant to be. I鈥檓 an eternal optimist, but I鈥檓 increasingly struck by the disconnect I see in restaurants between folks sharing a meal while immersed in their phones rather than really sharing the time together.

A news program recently reported on a story about a group of young women who agreed to lock away their phones and iPads for two weeks, which nearly devastated them. They described going through withdrawal, feeling like they couldn鈥檛 function for several days.

And then something happened. They started living in the moment, talking to the people they were around at any point in time, really experiencing what was going on in their environment. At the end of the two weeks, they described having made a breakthrough in feeling comfortable in their own skin, being aware of their surroundings in a whole new way, and relishing just talking to friends 鈥 and even strangers if they needed directions.

So then they were given their phones back, and in 10 seconds, each was busy in their own world with their phone, texting, tweeting, checking in online. Their favorite message: 鈥淚鈥檓 back!鈥

So, how will you change your life and live more in the moment, in the reality of where you are now, and celebrate each step in life鈥檚 journey?

麻豆原创 Forum columnist Eileen Smith is director of the E2i Creative Studio in the 麻豆原创鈥檚 Institute for Simulation & Training and can be reached at esmith@ist.ucf.edu.