Poof, it’s gone: The recent temporary loss of internet service took me back in time to an early computer blowout in Daydreaming on the Porch

  • April 7, 2024, 8:16 p.m.
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  • Public

Now they say phone addiction is leading to all kinds of mental health problems among young people. Which is probably true. They spend multiple hours a day scrolling TikTok shorts; keeping up with friends on Insta (Instagram; full disclosure, I have an Instagram account); frenetically languishing in a madcap, hyperspeed world of video games, violent images, and social media unreality, leaving real persons and others behind in their walled off fortress bedrooms glued to their devices.

But what about us older folks who are just as addicted, but in a more benign way, perhaps? This is especially true for people like myself who are rapidly aging in a world which, as always, revolves around youth, idealism, and infinite futures. This despite the fact that the world is going to “hell in a hand basket;” the most vicious kinds of war, including genocide and forced, man-made starvation, are gripping Europe and the Middle East; and large parts of our Mother Earth will be uninhabitable because of the extreme heat wrapping itself around the planet in coming decades, choking the life out of our “advanced” civilization. Oh, I almost forgot. The country is veering off toward becoming an autocracy, but that couldn’t happen here. But as long as we have internet…

So it’s a good thing I’m old. My world has become quite circumscribed since Covid. I’ve always been, I hate to say it, a rather “old soul” since I was a teenager, ensconced in my room with a vast stamp collection that was my pride and joy. That’s the kind of relaxing world of discovery I immersed myself in back in those long-ago, pre-internet days. I did, however, spent a fair amount of time outside, and went bowling, played tennis and swam at the country club.

Everything about that older world started changing dramatically around 1995. I got my first computer in 1996 and connected to the newly hatched cyberspace-age-like galaxy of entertainment and knowledge via a 28.8 kbps modem that slowly crackled with weird static noises that ended quietly, after which you were IN. Connected. Online. As in “America Online.” It got so that the pure ecstatic anticipation of modem sound became the tech sound of my life, the siren song of the late 20th century. I couldn’t wait to hear it as I sat at my computer desk (an old-fashioned, padded card table with a heavy, clunky Mac Performa desktop, later to be a futuristic looking but equally heavy cobalt blue iMac (circa 2000), which I thought was the coolest thing I had ever owned. I was in my mid to late 40s and felt like a kid again, with the ultimate toy right in front of me at my beck and call, endless hours a day in the evenings and early mornings of my night-owlish existence.

Now it’s 2024. I’m 73 and my lifelong companion and window on the world is my latest iPhone (Model 15 pro max) on which I do just about everything: reading, writing (with a stylus) watching YouTube videos where I can learn just about anything, taking photos (my only camera), dictation, and all the other tasks and chores of daily life I once did offline. My books are lonely. That’s big problem. When my cell service was knocked out for about eight hours recently, I tried to stay calm and carry on. But my little world was turned upside down in an instant. But turn back the clock? No way! I’ve even misplaced a book I’ve been meaning to to read that is titled, “100 Things We’ve Lost to the Internet.” Do I really want to know?

I have to laugh when I think about how unsettled and disoriented I was during that 8-hour internet cellular outage last month. I wrote and am re-posting the following essay from 25 years ago when the seismic shock of a major equipment failure turned my tech world upside own for the first time.

From my journal, November 30, 2000:

I walked into the room this past Sunday, in the early evening after supper, unaware and clueless as to what the coming moments would bring. I turned on the power button of the computer. I then heard a hissing and fizzing, a most alarming and disconcerting sound, like when you drop Alka Seltzer in water, and then a cascading series of popping noises, like little firecrackers going off, and then the telltale smell of something burning, like plastic maybe? Surely, surely it was not originating right in front of my nose.

Unmistakeable. I had that sinking feeling, for I knew that my seemingly invincible computer, my mother board-humming, monitor-glowing and keyboard-comforting, window on the world was self-destructing, giving up the ghost, surrendering to the relentless onslaught of my insatiable curiosity, my ever-present need to be online and connected to that vast and teeming world that exists in cyberspace.

Stunned. Disbelieving. Turned off the power. Stared at a blank screen. Silently raged against the failure of technology, when there’s nothing godlike about it. After all, — it’s just a computer, a machine, an extension of my mind and heart and soul, that’s all, and it was gone. Taken away. Zapped in a hail of electrical misfirings, exhausted finally, after 4 and 1/2 years of endless use, by the oh-so-human operator — me — the wizard behind the curtain who kept manipulating the controls to continuously amuse, inform, delight and frustrate himself in front of that magical box. Gone.

The past few days I’ve started my mornings in an altogether different frame of mind. An unconnected frame of mind. No computer. No Internet. A quiet bowl of cereal and blank stares at the wall, and then the TV, the blankest wall of all.

Now I’m back, but I was changed. I saw myself briefly as I once was. It was rather nice.

That was then, this is now. It’s not nice nor pleasant, nor anything else positive when your main connection to the world is gone, even if for only a few hours, as was the case a few weeks ago. Life can never be as it once was. Try as I might.


Last updated April 07, 2024


Jinn April 08, 2024

I love, love, love the internet and roaming all over it looking for things to amaze me . I used to be a lot more active physically so I was hardly on the internet at all. Now with my frequent episodes of not being able to move well ( and pain ) I have become very attached to my I- phone and do everything on it . Reading, videos, books, banking, on line shopping. Writing, music, photography , art, plus it’s a phone . I suppose I am addicted but it’s been a great source of education , entertainment and distraction for me. I never diss the internet . I would never want to go back to how we were before. However I still love books. :-)

Oswego Jinn ⋅ April 09, 2024

I agree completely. I love all the Internet offers and it’s been a life-changing experience for me and most everyone else. There is no possible way you can ever be bored with the internet. Back in pre-internet times, I can recall being much more often bored and antsy, or at least not feeling like doing anything that helped me pass the time in my youth, including reading books. . I had my big hobby, stamp collecting, and school took up a lot of time and mental and emotional energy, but knowledge of those inner and outer worlds we have access to now was simply very difficult to come by.

I always thought TV was a huge wasteland and almost never watched it. But yes, like you I love books more then anything, even if I don’t read them much, but I could never imagine going back in time before computers and the internet.

Jinn Oswego ⋅ April 09, 2024

I like TV in the evenings but I can read and watch tv :-) It drives my husband crazy that I do that but it works for me . In fact it’s rare that I ever just watch TV unless what I am watching is riveting. Every so often I stumble across a series or a movie that I am glued to but it’s not often. Recently I watched, “ The Three Body Problem” and it was very well done. I found out it’s a series of books I want to get. I like the series “ Sisi” about "Empress Elisabeth of Austria, also known as Empress Sisi. She was the wife of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria and Empress of Austria and Queen of Hungary. Sisi was known for her beauty, intelligence, and unconventional behavior, and she remains a significant historical figure in European royalty. Married by choice to Franz Joseph ( he was supposed to marry her sister ) at 16 . She was lost at court and stifled. She ended up being stabbed to death by an assassin. Sadly she was much more empathetic to the people of Austria than her husband was and she ended up murdered. The series was very well done. I like a detective show called , “ Will Trent” and of course the time travel series ; “ outlander”. “ The Way Back” is another well done series in Time Travel .

Oswego Jinn ⋅ April 10, 2024

I’m that way exactly. Something on my small screen has to be riveting or else I wander off to something else on my phone.

The “Sisi” series sounds fascinating. I’m guessing it’s on Netflix which I don’t have anymore.

Jinn Oswego ⋅ April 10, 2024

I think it is on Netflix. Eventually it will end up on you- tube . I think almost everything does.

Kristi1971 April 13, 2024

I use the internet for good. I use it for all sorts of learning vs. scrolling endlessly into the abyss of comparisons. I use the internet for my investigative work (for work), and that is sometimes dismal by itself. I can certainly see how impressionable minds could be really warped by the internet.

Oswego Kristi1971 ⋅ April 13, 2024

It’s a huge repository of the best and worst of humanity. It’s an accurate reflection of our society and world. I have found it to be life-changingly useful and enjoyable, and has helped the solitary person that I am reach out to others as I never in a million years could have without the Internet. That said, if I were a parent, I’d be very concerned, even if I felt I had taught my kids how to use the internet and what to be careful about. Youth are independent and go their own way, so it’s vital to impart good values and morals at an early age.

Kristi1971 Oswego ⋅ April 14, 2024

Yes!! To all of that. We would have never met if the internet didn't exist. It's pretty unlikely that we would have randomly met on the street. I agree with the concern for kids. I talk to the girls regularly and a lot about the internet. They like to play games on their tablets and interact with other players of those games. It's a must to pay attention to what the kiddos are doing with the internet and talk regularly about safety.

Oswego Kristi1971 ⋅ April 15, 2024

Absolutely! They need to often be reminded of what’s out there.

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