Staying in Touch Through Technology

by Mandi on January 17, 2012

staying in touch with technology

source: jayneandd

Nine months after we got married, Sean and I sold our condo and drove to Utah — where we knew no one — and bought a house. We found a church and jobs and started to make friends, but we’d left behind all of our family and the friends we’d grown up with.

Neither of us is very good at the whole staying-in-touch thing. We still talked to our parents a lot, and we stayed in pretty close contact with my aunt and uncle in California since they were just a day’s drive away, but we slowly started losing touch with other people.

Sad but true.

Then, two years after we’d set off on our grand adventure, we found ourselves missing “home”. We’d recently been back to visit, and I couldn’t stand the separation any longer. We made plans to sell our home and move back east, just weeks before we found out we were expecting our second daughter.

Since then, technology has continued to grow by leaps and bounds, and staying in touch is easier than ever. I don’t see us moving away again any time soon (although there are times when the beaches of Costa Rica call my name!), but if we did, I have a feeling we’d feel more connected to those we left behind this time around.

Let’s look at some of the ways technology has changed our long-distance relationships:

Cell Phones

Cell phones certainly aren’t new — we even had one of those in Utah — but changes to plans and rates make staying connected easier and more affordable every year. Many people use a cell phone instead of a landline, and there’s something to be said for free long distance and being able to chat with friends and family for free through various calling plans and from a variety of places.

Webcams

We also had a webcam while we were living out west, but it was an external camera that had to be setup and attached to my laptop when we wanted to use it, and we didn’t use it very often.

Now, however, built-in PC cameras make getting face time with friends and family easier than ever, and the girls regularly chat with my parents even though they’re only a couple of hours away and we see them in person regularly!

Internet Calls

Even if you don’t want the face-to-face interaction, internet calls through Skype, Google Calls and other voice-over-IP (VoIP) services are much less expensive than regular long-distance calling. Tsh from Simple Mom lived overseas for several years with her husband and kids, and internet calls made staying in touch with friends and family affordable for them!

I know many people who use VoIP for all of their long-distance calls to avoid additional charges.

Social Media

And of course, social media has had a profound impact on relationships. I absolutely love how much easier it is to stay in touch with old friends through Facebook, and I’ve had several friendships pick back up where they’d left off thanks to Facebook.

While there are people who decry the influence that social media has on our lives, I really love connecting with people through sites like Instagram and Facebook so that I can read and see not just the big milestones but also some of the more mundane happenings. Although it’s not a replacement for heart-to-heart conversations, it’s really a great way to connect across time zones and continents!

I wouldn’t be surprised if at least one of my kids moves away when they’re adults, and I’m so thankful to be living in a time when staying in touch is easier than ever!

I am so excited to be partnering with Intel, the sponsors of tomorrow, to bring you my opinion on some of the issues that affect our lives today. Join the conversation on Twitter with hashtag #IntelEMP!

Do you have friends and family spread across the country or around the world? How do you stay in touch?

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  • Rana

    My best friend and her husband just moved to Mexico in September.  I thought it was going to be hard not seeing her when I felt like hopping in the car and  driving the hour it used to take to visit. 

    Funny thing is now that they are in Mexico we talk more through Internet calling and text.  We plan on setting up Skype. We also email and send pictures of my family to keep in touch.  Being hundreds or thousands of miles away isn’t like what it used to be. 

  • Lydia

    Being a  military family skype, facebook and phones is the best way to stay in touch with family and deployed loved ones. My most favorite still is the old school way, handwritten letters and cards.

  • http://joyceandnorm.wordpress.com Joyce and Norm

    Hubby’s cousin’s wife became a foreign service officer for the US Embassy last year and was stationed to Thailand for 2 years. Our girls love them, so it is nice that we get to go to videochat with them. Timing is a bit tricky sometimes since they are about 16 hours ahead of us, but it’s nice to see them even for a little bit through the screen since we only get to see them 1-2/year in person.

  • http://makeithappenmama.blogspot.com/ Emily @ Make It Happen Mama

    Thank God for technology! I’m living apart from my husband & son for work right now and Skype/email/Facebook/cell phones make it *far* less painful! :-)

  • http://twitter.com/HeidiLeonard Heidi Leonard

    Getting the VIBER app for my smart phone has absolutely changed my communication (for the better!) with my best friend that currently lives in australia.  I can talk and text with her for free because she has it as well! (it’s like skpe for smart phones!)

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