What Your Google Searches Say About
Your Spiritual Life
from Relevant - Andrea Lucado
The dangers of turning to the Internet
for answers to questions that we should be asking ourselves — and God.
The following is a list of questions I have recently Googled:
How many calories are women supposed to
eat every day?
If it’s been six days since our first
date and he hasn’t called. Is he ever going to?
How do you relieve neck pain?
How do you know if you’re a control
freak?
It is an amazing gift to have so much knowledge at our
fingertips. But the other day, right after I Googled
the fourth question on that list, I began to feel uneasy about my Google use.
Why am I asking Google this? I asked myself, as I scrolled through
article after article with headlines like “7 Sure Signs You Are a Control Freak
and Your Friends Hate You Because of It.” I’ve known
for a while now that I have control issues in certain areas of my life (Most of
us do, OK?). I don’t need Google to tell me this, which led to wonder, What am I really asking here?
I would much rather Google “neck pain relief tips” than
ask why I am feeling anxious in the first place. I would much rather read
articles about how men communicate than ask myself if I am worthy of a man’s
affection.
Answering Life’s Questions
According to a study done at Yale University, the
Internet is making us think we’re smarter than we are. As the study’s abstract
explains: “Here we show that searching the Internet for explanatory knowledge
creates an illusion whereby people mistake access to information for their own
personal understanding of the information.”
But, “When people are truly on their own, they may be
wildly inaccurate about how much they know and how dependent they are on the
Internet ... searching the Internet for information creates an increase in
‘cognitive self-esteem,’ though not necessarily an increase in intelligence.”
I think this applies to emotional intelligence and
self-awareness as well.
At the heart of those questions I listed above are much
deeper life questions. What I type into Google is simply a shallow version of
them. I am beginning to worry that we, the generation that doesn’t remember
life before the search engine, are growing dependent on Google not only for
facts and directions, but also for a false feeling that our big questions are
being answered, when actually, they aren’t.
Let me explain using the list above:
How many calories are women supposed to
eat every day?
Real question: How does my body and health measure up
compared to the standard?
If it’s been six days since our first
date and he hasn’t called, is he ever going to?
Real question: Is he rejecting me, and if so, why? Is
there something wrong with me?
How can I relieve neck pain?
Real question: Why am I anxious and how do I find
peace?
How do you know if you’re a control
freak?
Real question: Do I possess undesirable character
qualities? Will others accept me?
Digging Deeper
If I ask Google the shallow questions, then I don’t have
to ask myself the real questions. I would much rather Google “neck pain relief
tips” than ask why I am feeling anxious in the first place. I would much rather
read articles about how men communicate than ask myself if I am worthy of a
man’s affection.
If we are living under this illusion that the big
questions about our lives can be answered, then we are essentially living under
the illusion that we, as the answer-bearers, have our lives under control. And
when we have all the answers—and, therefore, all of the control—who needs a
God? Who needs faith?
Some questions do not belong in the hands of Google. Some
questions need to be asked of God, need to be reflected on and considered and
discussed with people we trust. This may not be what culture tells us to do,
but this is what the Bible tells us to do:
“Where there is no guidance, a people falls, but in an
abundance of counselors there is safety” (Proverbs 11:14).