Electronic Products: Double-edged Swords Affecting Marital Relationships

There was an intruder in my married life. It is dazzling, colorful, attractive and easy to hold, and it occupies my husband's attention all night. I've had enough. This intruder is my husband's iPad, a thing that I strongly oppose him buying.

After staring at my work computer, home computer, laptop, and cell phone all day, I'm happy to finally relax my eyes, regain my traditional books, and read quiet, rustic pages. The iPad is constantly shifting my attention with its bright icons and dazzling light, and it always distracts me from reading my own reading material. I couldn't read it when I was there, but my husband loved it.

Our dispute over e-readers and "Deadwood" (technical enthusiasts would call traditional books so brutally) is not the only disagreement caused by equipment. This disagreement is invading the original rapport.

Technology can narrow the distance between lovers. How amazing it is for a couple to marvel at the product when visiting an Apple store! But not all partners can get along in science and technology.

28-year-old Amy Robinson is still using a Nokia mobile phone of the 1990s. She said: "My boyfriend Bill thinks my cell phone is funny.

He always laughed at me: Why did you use that phone? Are you wrong?

A couple can be as friendly as friends, couples, and cohabiting partners, but it is irritating to have a passion for technology products. This is because although partners love each other, they also love their own things. Some studies have shown that using mobile phones as an example, people will have a love-like feeling about their own mobile phones. A study found that young people in Australia believe that "the mobile phone is a part of them." Another study found that only 1% of U.S. college students said that if the mobile phone is lost, they “will try to live without a mobile phone.”

The preference of a partner for electronic products is not always the same. The 42-year-old Shaw Group's general manager and publisher Odyssey Publishing Co., Charles Addie, mentioned his tablet Naomi Novelk's collection of tablets: "I hate her iPad and Kindle Fire. I'm not right. Books that are printed from paper and ink have a sense of aversion."

Adi said that these differences are much more profound than the surface phenomenon of "I like this one more than that little invention." He said: "Naomi is an extreme tidal person because she is fundamentally an optimist and I am a pessimist. That's why I write novels of melancholy meditation and I have eccentric technicalities. idea."

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