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comment by MaxUdargo
MaxUdargo  ·  4838 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: What was daily life like before almost everyone had cell phones?
It just makes me feel old to realize that most of the people with whom I now share the world would shake their heads in disbelief at the idea that a telephone was a device that sat on a table in your home. When somebody called you on the telephone, it meant they were calling your home. If you weren't home, they didn't talk to you. Maybe they would leave a message on a machine or with a family member who was home. Then, later, when you got home, you would get the message and call them back. At their home.

Actually, remembering how it was I realize it seems kind of alien to me too now. I wonder how we ever managed the inconvenience of it all. But then I also remember how nice it was before you were expected to be so accessible. You never had to answer the phone, because you always had an excuse for not answering: "I wasn't home."





Wed7pm  ·  4838 days ago  ·  link  ·  
That's an excellent point: that calling a landline meant calling a place (with the hope that the person you wanted to speak to would be there). Now with mobiles/cell-phones, we're calling a person. That's a big difference.

I still manage to not answer the phone, though, thanks to Caller ID :) Yay! That's been a huge change for me. Before that, I used to dread picking up the phone until I knew who it was.

The whole thing of feeling old when technology changes - I know what you mean. I feel old anyway, regardless, but it does feel strange to have witnessed society changing so drastically. But maybe the changes tend to fade into the background after a while. I once asked my grandmother what it had been like to live through all the many changes she'd seen over her lifetime (she died aged 99) and her answer was the equivalent of "Meh!" She'd experienced the introduction of electricity, home phones, cars, planes, space travel, television, mobile phones, computers, and then the introduction of the internet age, and it was like she hadn't really noticed any of it as being unusual. Maybe that was just her, though.

mk  ·  4836 days ago  ·  link  ·  
I just spent three nights in Upper Michigan. We have a phone, but get almost no cellular reception. I can get and send text messages, and can sometimes make a phone call on the beach. No internet, but if I let my phone sit on for several hours, sometimes an email will come in.

Anyway. It's pretty liberating. This is my family's cottage, and I am considering just making a 'no contact' rule next time I go. We are social animals, but even social animals need alone time.

Wed7pm  ·  4834 days ago  ·  link  ·  
That need for "no contact" time, and MaxUdargo's comment about remembering "how nice it was before you were expected to be so accessible" - it's clear the phones have changed the way we live, which is just a bit scary, really.