'Escapism should be recontextualized, and active imaginations should be celebrated.'
The internet has become not only ubiquitous, but responsible for the ways we collectively identify and build our public image. To many a netizen, the online experience is so omnipresent that the words we have chosen to describe separating from it, or taking time away from it, allude to cutting off a toxic, unhealthy habit.
What if, instead of counteracting unhealthy digital habits with stopping exposure altogether, we attempted to consume healthier kinds of media? The founders of New York'sbelieve that problems caused by screens can also be solved using screens. Luxury Escapism immediately offers a cup of hot tea, with plush slippers and robes. Whispering is required and cellphones are prohibited. Staff members guide guests into what feels like a playground for adults, with various tents, a rock garden and mood lighting. Each station is equipped with its own site-specific VR goggles; ones in a hammock take you on a soothing forest river cruise, while another station's emulated a psychedelic '60s flower garden.
On a semantic level, I think"escapism" is a very fraught term right now — one that has negative connotations of someone who can't exist in the real world and turns to drugs or alcohol. In reality, everyone practices escapism in one form or another. Think of the last time you got caught up in a good book and lost track of time and space — sleeping, partying, superhero movies, hot yoga — I can think of a million examples.
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