Virtual Reality – A New World, But at What Cost?

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hello everyone in here

I will never forget the day my little cousin, Johnson, tried VR for the first time. His eyes widened as he "stood" on the edge of a virtual skyscraper, knees shaking like leaves. He screamed, laughed, then screamed again, all while sitting safely in our living room. That moment was pure magic. But later, when I peeled the headset off his sweaty face, I noticed something strange. He blinked at the real world like he had forgotten it existed. And that really scared me.

source

VR is amazing. It can take you to places you may never see, let you meet people from other countries, and even teach you new skills. In medicine, doctors can practice surgeries before doing them on real patients. In schools, children can learn about space by “visiting” planets. In science, researchers can explore ideas that are too dangerous or expensive in real life.

But, like every powerful tool, VR has two sides.

If people start spending many hours every day inside VR, they may forget the real world around them. Just like with phones and computers, too much use can make us addicted. We might start to prefer the fake world because it feels more exciting or more beautiful than reality. This can make real life feel boring, and that’s dangerous for our minds.

When our brains spend too much time in a virtual world, it can change how we see and feel things in real life. We might have trouble focusing, sleeping, or even talking to people face-to-face. Our eyes and brain are not made to live in a headset for hours. Some people might get headaches, dizziness, or feel “lost” when they take the headset off.

Another risk is creativity. VR gives you a ready-made world, but real creativity comes from building your own world in your mind. If everything is already created for us, will we still imagine, draw, write, or invent new things on our own?

[source](https://pixabay.com/illustrations/virtual-reality-vr-technology-8903108/)

VR can also make people more lonely. If we replace real hugs, real laughter, and real moments with only virtual ones, we lose the warmth of human touch. No matter how real VR feels, it cannot replace the feeling of sitting with a friend, hearing their voice without a speaker, or holding their hand.

I think VR is like a knife, it can be used to cook a meal and feed people, or it can cause harm. It depends on how we use it. If we use VR for learning, exploring, helping others, and creating, it can be a big step for technology. But if we use it to escape reality, avoid people, or hide from problems, it can hurt our minds, our hearts, and our health.

In the end, I believe VR should be like a spice in life, something that adds flavor, not something that becomes the whole meal. The real world, with its fresh air, real smiles, and honest feelings, should always be our main home.

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3 comments

I love the points you made about VR how it can be a knife in two edges, your brother's experience feels so real to me. Thank you for sharing this experience.

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you are welcome graceze, and thanks also for checking my post here, VR has a little advantages but a lots of disadvantages

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@bigpsalm

Your post after scrutinization by the team was found to be AI generated, and since the community frowns at such you have been muted in the community.

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You can appeal here:
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