Did you know that the average American spends over 3 hours texting every day? Texting in Sick reveals that texting has become the preferred medium for many people—even in complex conversations, such as reporting in sick for work, delivering bad news, and breaking up relationships.
But what happens to our relationships when we handle such conversations on text? How does texting change our attitudes and expectations towards the people we communicate with? And how are trust and empathy impacted when we use a medium with such a limited range of social cues?
In Texting in Sick, you’ll uncover the answers to these questions and explore the cultural, psychological, and technological trends behind the growing use of texting and smartphones. Filled with compelling research and plenty of tweetable statistics, Texting in Sick urges us to take a fresh look at our communication habits and reconsider the ways we engage with our mobile devices.
Book Review: Xander Gray’s Obedience Protocol and the Terrifying Comfort of Moral Certainty
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐(5 Stars) What if the most dangerous thing in the world wasn’t chaos, but clarity? Obedience Protocol turns moral certainty into its own form of horror, and it does so with unnerving precision. That idea sits at the center of Xander Gray’s gripping speculative novel, a story that feels less like a warning from the…








