I've been posting in this thread since the beginning, but until today I hadn't bothered to read through the responses from start to finish. Decided to do so because I've been helping someone with a website on my off-time and I feel that feeling creeping in of wasting my life in front of my laptop... I know someone whose job revolves entirely around sending emails and writing documents, all of which are done on a computer. This means from 6 in the morning until 8 at night, he's stationary and staring at that screen. I don't want to live like that and I am going to do to everything I can to avoid having that mirror my existence.
Thoughts:
zeitgeist wrote:Even my friends give my girlfriend and I shit for not having access at home--we don't even have a TV.
The first thing I thought having read that was, "well then what do you do with your time?" My second thought was "holy shit, did I really just think that?" That sounds like a very peaceful existence to me. I suppose you do a lot of reading and talking and cooking, right?
IanRedpoint wrote:I've been closely involved with technology from a very young age, due to the fact my dad programmed mainframes in the '70s. It always used to be that the technology did what we humans asked it to do, enhancing our capabilities but ultimately being nothing more than an extension of ourselves. A couple of weeks ago I had Facebook messaging me to suggest I send someone a birthday greeting. What struck me was that we've crossed over to a state where we humans are doing tasks for the computers rather than them working for us. I don't need to tell anyone how wrong that is.
You know, I hadn't thought of it that way, but you're absolutely right. The "technology serving humans" paradigm is turning on its head. Particularly when you look at "the IT guy" at any large company, racing out of bed at 2 in the morning in the name of uptime.
My initial thoughts on this haven't changed. Still love it.
pianoforte wrote:Some thoughts:
I have a love/hate relationship with social networking. I keep a file on my laptop called antisocial.rtf which lists what 'social networks' - meaning websites with a social component, not counting forums - I'm on. It currently consists of:
lookbook
pinterest
facebook
vimeo
tumblr
vsco
flickr
glitche
reddit
Not proud that the list is that long. I plan to remove myself from Lookbook, Pinterest, Flickr and Glitche soon and consolidate some things on my Tumblr. I don't like social networking very much at all, but I do find it useful for meeting likeminded individuals and following artists/musicians/photographers whose work I admire. Tumblr is my favorite by far.
Interesting to look back on this, particularly since I did another "purge" more recently. Currently my list is really just facebook, tumblr, flickr and a selection of email addresses. Each of these has a particular purpose, so I don't feel as bad about it as when I had all those other services like Pinterest for their own sake.
Valotonin wrote:The internet will take over but society will collapse so as long as you are comfortable with the idea of using plants for medicine and using 21st century knowledge in an outdoor environment everything will be better than okay.
None of this matters as long as you can survive and be happy within nature. I am sorry if anything like this stems from the nihilism of that 'tomorrow's harvest' post I made a while ago the truth is I was quite an unwell person for a while.
Celebrate collapse because it will be beautiful x
This is genuinely one of the most beautiful things I've read in a long while, and it really affected me. Thank you.