Surfing the web is a  phrase we hear often referring to the practice of 
browsing web sites and looking for something of interest. A religious 
sister who has made a study of media, and spirituality writes on the 
subject in the Catholic Times. She is moved by the interest that she 
sees of those who are surfing  and their expressions, very much like 
children who are absorbed in playing computer games.
The ocean
 of Information on  the Internet is waiting for us to access it.  Those 
who are on the beach waiting for the wave to surf-ride, she explains to 
her readers, are moving back and forth, which has  a similarity to what 
we call surfing the web. However, she says, in surfing the web it might 
seem that searching on the Internet will require reading and absorption,
 but she uses a study that says most do not spend more than 5 minutes at
 any one site. Consequently, she calls this more like shopping than 
reading.
Many people nowadays begin their search on the 
Internet in the morning, like having someone waiting for them to deal 
with the boring hours of their trip. However, when this practice becomes
 a habit, there will be problems in concentrating on a subject for any 
period  of time. We don't have the patience to read a book, and  we lose
 the ability to examine and look into ourselves. Searching is fast and 
easy, we are instantly gratified, which makes the painstaking effort
 necessary to do  a serious study the old way difficult. 
When 
 accustomed to a way of doing something, and repeating it often this becomes
 an embedded habit that will influence all we say and do. Easily to see
 how this will affect our spiritual life, the slow and deep 
contemplative way of living will be pushed to the edges. Prayer, 
liturgy, efforts to listen to sermons will all be affected. The 
structures of our  brains will be affected by what we do and think, and 
in time will change the world in which we live.
St.Francis de
 Sales says that there are those who are very busy and occupied  with 
others who are meticulously and carefully in search of God. This search 
rather than be quick and easy is slow and patient. We should not give 
our space and time for  deep thinking to the searching on the Internet.
 Especially when traveling on the subway, we should bury our smart 
phones in our traveling bag and take out a  'book'. Is it not then we can be open to meeting God?