NOBODY calls me anymore — and that’s just fine. With the exception of  immediate family members, who mostly phone to discuss medical symptoms  and arrange child care, and the Roundabout Theater  fund-raising team, which takes a diabolical delight in phoning me every  few weeks at precisely the moment I am tucking in my children, people  just don’t call. 
 It’s at the point where when the phone does ring — and it’s not my mom,  dad, husband or baby sitter — my first thought is: “What’s happened?  What’s wrong?” My second thought is: “Isn’t it weird to just call like  that? Out of the blue? With no e-mailed warning?”        
 I don’t think it’s just me. Sure, teenagers gave up the phone call eons  ago. But I’m a long way away from my teenage years, back when the key  rite of passage was getting a phone in your bedroom or (cue Molly  Ringwald gasp) a line of your own.        
 In the last five years, full-fledged adults have seemingly given up the  telephone — land line, mobile, voice mail and all. According to Nielsen  Media, even on cellphones, voice spending has been trending downward,  with text spending expected to surpass it within three years.        
 “I literally never use the phone,” Jonathan Adler, the interior  designer, told me. (Alas, by phone, but it had to be.) “Sometimes I call  my mother on the way to work because she’ll be happy to chitty chat.  But I just can’t think of anyone else who’d want to talk to me.” Then  again, he doesn’t want to be called, either. “I’ve learned not to press  ‘ignore’ on my cellphone because then people know that you’re there.”         
 “I remember when I was growing up, the rule was, ‘Don’t call anyone  after 10 p.m.,’ ” Mr. Adler said. “Now the rule is, ‘Don’t call anyone.  Ever.’ ”        
 Phone calls are rude. Intrusive. Awkward. “Thank you for noticing  something that millions of people have failed to notice since the  invention of the telephone until just now,” Judith Martin, a k a Miss  Manners, said by way of opening our phone conversation. “I’ve been  hammering away at this for decades. The telephone has a very rude  propensity to interrupt people.”        
 Though the beast has been somewhat tamed by voice mail and caller ID,  the phone caller still insists, Ms. Martin explained, “that we should  drop whatever we’re doing and listen to me.”        
 Even at work, where people once managed to look busy by wearing a  headset or constantly parrying calls back and forth via a harried  assistant, the offices are silent. The reasons are multifold. Nobody has  assistants anymore to handle telecommunications. And in today’s nearly  door-free workplaces, unless everyone is on the phone, calls are  disruptive and, in a tight warren of cubicles, distressingly public.  Does anyone want to hear me detail to the dentist the havoc six-year  molars have wreaked on my daughter?        
 “When I walk around the office, nobody is on the phone,” said Jonathan  Burnham, senior vice president and publisher at HarperCollins. The  nature of the rare business call has also changed. “Phone calls used to  be everything: serious, light, heavy, funny,” Mr. Burnham said. “But now  they tend to be things that are very focused. And almost everyone  e-mails first and asks, ‘Is it O.K. if I call?’ ”        
 Even in fields where workers of various stripes (publicists, agents,  salespeople) traditionally conducted much of their business by phone,  hoping to catch a coveted decision-maker off-guard or in a down moment,  the phone stays on the hook. When Matthew Ballast, an executive director  for publicity at Grand Central Publishing, began working in book  publicity 12 years ago, he would go down his list of people to cold  call, then follow up two or three times, also by phone. “I remember five  years ago, I had a pad with a list of calls I had to return,” he said.  Now, he talks by phone two or three times a day.        
 “You pretty much call people on the phone when you don’t understand their e-mail,” he said. 
 Phone call appointments have become common in the workplace. Without  them, there’s no guarantee your call will be returned. “Only people I’ve  ruthlessly hounded call me back,” said Mary Roach, author of “Packing  for Mars.” Writers and others who work alone can find the silence  isolating. “But if I called my editor and agent every time I wanted to  chat, I think they’d say, ‘Oh no, Mary Roach is calling again.’ So I’ve  pulled back, just like everyone else.”           
 Whereas people once received and made calls with friends on a regular  basis, we now coordinate such events via e-mail or text. When college  roommates used to call (at least two reunions ago), I would welcome  their vaguely familiar voices. Now, were one of them to call on a  Tuesday evening, my first reaction would be alarm. Phone calls from  anyone other than immediate family tend to signal bad news.        
 Receiving calls on the cellphone can be a particular annoyance. First,  there’s the assumption that you’re carrying the thing at all times. For  those in homes with stairs, the cellphone siren can send a person  scrambling up and down flights of steps in desperate pursuit. Having the  cellphone in hand doesn’t necessarily lessen the burden. After all,  someone might actually be using the phone: someone who is in the middle of scrolling through a Facebook  photo album. Someone who is playing Cut the Rope. Someone who is in the  process of painstakingly touch-tapping an important e-mail.        
 For the most part, assiduous commenting on a friend’s Facebook updates  and periodically e-mailing promises to “catch up by phone soon”  substitute for actual conversation. With friends who merit face time,  arrangements are carried out via electronic transmission. “We do  everything by text and e-mail,” said Laurie David, a Hollywood producer  and author. “It would be strange at this point to try figuring all that  out by phone.”        
 Of course, immediate family members still phone occasionally. “It’s  useful for catching up on parenting issues with your ex-husband,” said  Ms. David, who used to be married to Larry David, the star of “Curb Your Enthusiasm.” “Sometimes when you don’t want to type it all, it’s just easier to talk.”        
 But even sons, husbands and daughters don’t always want to chat. In our  text-heavy world, mothers report yearning for the sound of their teenage  and adult children’s voices. “I’m sort of missing the phone,” said Lisa  Birnbach, author of “True Prep” and mother of three teenagers. “It’s  warmer and more honest.”        
 That said, her landline “has become a kind of vestigial part of my house  like the intercom buttons once used in my prewar building to contact  the ‘servants quarters.’ ” When the phone rings, 9 times out of 10, it’s  her mother.        
 There are holdouts. Radhika Jones, an assistant managing editor at Time  magazine, still has a core group of friends she talks to by phone.  “I’ve always been a big phone hound,” she said. “My parents can tell you  about the days before call waiting.” Yet even she has slipped into new  habits: Voice mails from her husband may not get listened to until end  of day. Phone messages are returned by e-mail. “At least you’re  responding!”        
 But heaven forbid you actually have to listen — especially to voice  mail. The standard “let the audience know this person is a loser” scene  in movies where the forlorn heroine returns from a night of cat-sitting  to an answering machine that bleats “you have no messages” would cause  confusion with contemporary viewers. Who doesn’t heave a huge sigh of  relief to find there’s no voice mail? Is it worth punching in a  protracted series of codes and passwords to listen to some  three-hour-old voice say, “call me” when you could glance at caller ID  and return the call — or better yet, e-mail back instead?        
 Many people don’t even know how their voice mail works. “I’ve lost that skill,” Ms. Birnbach said.        
 “I have no idea how to check it,” Ms. David admitted. “I can stay in a  hotel for three days with that little red light blinking and never  listen. I figure, if someone needs to reach me, they’ll e-mail.”        
 “I don’t check these messages often,” intoned a discouraging recorded  voice, urging callers to try e-mail. And this is the voice-mail  recording of Claude S. Fischer, author of a book on the history of the  telephone and more recently, “Still Connected: Family and Friends in  America Since 1970.”        
 “When the telephone first appeared, there were all kinds of etiquette  issues over whom to call and who should answer and how,” Dr. Fischer, a  sociology professor at the University of California, Berkeley,  told me when finally reached by phone. Among the upper classes, for  example, it was thought that the butler should answer calls. For a long  time, inviting a person to dinner by telephone was beyond the pale;  later, the rules softened and it was O.K. to call to ask someone to  lunch.        
 Telephones were first sold exclusively for business purposes and only  later as a kind of practical device for the home. Husbands could phone  wives when traveling on business, and wives could order their groceries  delivered. Almost immediately, however, people began using the telephone  for social interactions. “The phone companies tried to stop that for  about 30 years because it was considered improper usage,” Dr. Fischer  said.        
 We may be returning to the phone’s original intentions — and impact. “I  can tell you exactly the last time someone picked up the phone when I  called,” Mary Roach said. “It was two months ago and I said: ‘Whoa! You  answered your phone!’ It was a P.R. person. She said, ‘Yeah, I like to  answer the phone.’ ” Both were startled to be voice-to-voice with  another unknown, unseen human being.        
 
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