I was hanging out with a friend one time, and we were talking about a trip we were going on with other friends to San Diego, and my friend talked about how wonderful it was going to be to lie on the couch and text while in San Diego. So I responded, “You are going to San Diego to text?” He replied, “Yeah, but it’s San Diego, so there will be a difference.”
Looking back on this now, I realize that my friend had a grasp (although very weak) of a concept, which is how places are different, but he also experienced placelessness.
Placelessness has become a bigger problem following the digital revolution and digital communication. While before the digital revolution, we had a somewhat clear sense of place, with different spaces being set apart for different functions such as home, church, schools, parks, beaches, amusement parks, concert halls, and theaters, that sense of place has been disappearing with the constant distractions and interruptions of digital technology.
If everywhere we go, we check our phones for texts, or Facebook and Twitter for status updates, or check one of a million other possible notifications related to our apps, then we will lose our sense of place. Every place becomes a place for texts, news, and notifications, and the functions that separate and distinguish each place from another become blurred.
However, placefulness, the strong sense of place and the distinctness that each place has, helps us in three ways.