I’m not upgrading
By Truth42
- 6841 reads
Athletes say that they can run just as fast as they ever did but it’s the recovery factor that gets them. Boxers claim that it’s impossible to maintain the hunger that compelled them to get up at three in the morning and pound the pavements. Me – being someone for whom scarcely a day goes by when I’m not actively looking for signs and signals – it’s upgrading that has got me; or rather the sudden desire to no longer upgrade that maybe tells me that age is suddenly becoming an issue.
Isn’t it a fact that all of our lives is actually one long upgrade process? From the moment we’re forced out into the world we’re told that in order to live it is imperative that we progress. We go to school and cram our heads full of facts and information that is only designed to lead us to a better place. University comes next and still more information which, if imbibed in sufficient quantity, will allow us to place a couple of letters at the end of our name. Which leads to a job and a ladder that must always be climbed. And upwards is the only direction for to descend is unacceptable. As is to stay still.
All around us the world is in constant upgrade: in the home yesterday’s vacuum cleaner is replaced by a transparent monster capable of creating its own mini black hole. The trusty old record player is replaced by 8-track, then by cassette, then by CD and mini-disk and MP3 and AAC before devolving back to vinyl. Televisions mutate from wooden cabinets into megalithic monsters into sleek, impossible shiny membranes of vibrant, edible colour. The path we find ourselves on is constantly moving forward – but to where?
This is a question that I’ve only recently begun to ask myself with any degree of regularity. It certainly wasn’t an issue a quarter of a century when I stumped up close to three grand for a piece of plastic, metal and glass that I thought was going to make my life SO much easier. And it certainly wasn't a factor when, within a matter of hours of powering up that grey benign box of buzzing microchips, I was asked to click a button that permitted something called an ‘operating system’ to upgrade to its latest iteration.
I was innocent then, of course. And I wasn't to know that I would be clicking that ‘OK’ button so many times in the years to come that eventually I would have to see a doctor in order to seek an upgrade to a wrist which in protest had ceased to function.
And it wasn't just the ‘operating system’ that was in constant flux. The software you used to write or design with or make music with also need constant upgrading. As did any games that you might play to while away the hours. And it seemed that at the very moment the software you were using had achieved perfection it was replaced by another version and the endless, monotonous upgrade process began again. Why were you doing this? Where was it taking you? Did this continual evolution make you any more productive than before? Most certainly not.
And as software evolved so by necessity did the vessels that contained it. The grey box you purchased was replaced by a blue translucent box, which shrank in size to become something that accompanied you to libraries and cafés. And scarcely a day went by, an hour, when you weren’t being asked to upgrade something or other. The only thing you never seemed to upgrade was yourself.
And finally your computer became so small that you put it in your back pocket. So tiny, so ubiquitous, that everywhere you looked somebody was clutching one like a mother protecting a child. On tubes and buses you never saw people’s eyes any more. Only their foreheads. And as these people prodded away at these glittering slabs of plastic and glass still the upgrades came thick and fast.
And then… And then…
Not so long ago a battery of text messages arrived one morning to cheerfully inform me that I’d paid up the contract on my mobile and could I please upgrade to a newer model so that I could take out another 24-month loan in order to pay for it. Blind instinct, of course, immediately found me on the provider’s website perusing the array of alternatives on offer. It was a routine that most of us have been following for well over a decade.
And then it suddenly struck me: why did I want a new phone? What was the point of upgrading? The mobile phone I had in my pocket was, I reasoned, just as capable of doing all the things it was able to do when I took it out of its shiny packaging two years earlier. It took photos and videos; it sent and received texts and emails; it played music and movies; at a push I could use it to write on; it helped to find me when I was lost in the streets of London; it woke me up in the morning; it told me how far I hadn’t walked that day; I read books and magazines on it; I played scrabble with it; I used it to check social media; and I occasionally made phone calls with it.
What could a newer model do that the one that I owned could not?
This, I understood, was my road to Damascus moment. The tipping point. Like those athletes and boxers I mentioned earlier, age had finally come upon me. I was no longer going to upgrade my life just for the purpose of upgrading my life.
That was two months ago and already the rot has set in. That dying laptop that intended to upgrade has been left unattended. No need to replace the rattling car that gets me from a to b quite efficiently, thank you very much. No need for a new TV or light bulbs that don’t require switches. I’m not upgrading anymore. I’ve got where I want to be.
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Comments
Hi, good to see you back on
Hi, good to see you back on the site! I have lots of sympathy with this. I have not yet reached the level of resisting all upgrades, but I do tend only to replace if it breaks. Perhaps indeed it is an age and experience thing - the only thing the bright, shiny new toy may have going for it is its brightness and shininess.
I did find the size of text quite difficult to read on the screen, although it was helped by changing to 'reading mode', which disappeared off my laptop during a previous upgrade, but was restored on the latest one.
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I'm with you on this, but
I'm with you on this, but those people are clever. Don't want to upgrade your phone? We'll give it a battery that dies within 2 years. Think you can change the battery? Think again. It's now part of the phone. You've agitated me. Nice work.
Parson Thru
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This splendid
rant is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day: Why not share or retweet it if you like it?
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Is the image your own?
I notice you gave no credit/source/copyright information. It's just we can't use it on Facebook or Twitter without it.
Best
Ewan
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If
you made the image yourself, all you need to do is put "Image:author's own". If not and the image is one you have found on the internet then you need to check whether you can actually use it or it is copyright of the owner/creator. Wikicommons images always have usage agreements attached somewhere on the image's actual page. Pinterest etc images are risky as people are using many without permission. The wording depends on what the free usage rights are.
The owner of this site (quite rightly since it is a creative writing site) is concerned about any inadvertent copyright infringements, since - if we hold the moral high ground - it is easier to deal with cases of plagiarism, as when something of mine was a victim of such quite a few years ago.
Hope this is not too confusing.
Best
Ewan
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A good read. Cohesive and
A good read. Cohesive and focused as well as being witty.
Alas, although I agree, I must confess to being a tech junkie. I could wander in an Apple store for days...until I was reported missing even. It's daft, I can't even work out how to use the stuff properly but I still have to have it as soon as it's released.
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I'm more a downgrader than
I'm more a downgrader than upgrader. People complain because a mobile phone is meant to be mobile. Good for them. Well, not really. Taking endless pictures of themself and my pet hate, you're talking to someone and their phone beeps. You're yesterday's news. Technology is a marvellous thing, but as you say it has its place. I found it quite hard to read your script even with the use of shaved bits of glass perched on the edge of my nose.
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If I'm speaking with someone
If I'm speaking with someone and they step out of the conversation to answer their mobile I tend to just walk off. Likewise if they start texting.
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I generally have my mobile on
I generally have my mobile on silent and ignore the vibrations. Then, when I feel like it, and never when I am talking to a friend, I look at the texts. Sometimes I leave it at home or at my boyfriend's place. Or I lose it at my place and can't be a**sed phoning it on my landline to locate it. Yes this is age-related but AFAIK it is not dementia. It is because I got along fine without one for 43 years and I don't like my life getting interrupted on other people's terms. I use it when I feel like doing so.
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So true, where will the
So true, where will the upgrading end? Everytime i watch the Olympics, especially the gymnastics I wonder how high will they jump in another four years, how many spins? I am also for degrading, possibly devolving too, back in the caves, grunting and chewing on bones, living the dream...Well deserved pick of the day.
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ah - upgrading - I only do it
ah - upgrading - I only do it if the New Thing is going to be better than the Old Thing and/or Apple announce their plans to make the Old Thing redundant, (which is a huge rip-off)
Nice to see you again! To change the font size, I think all you have to do is go into 'edit'. If you get stuck,let me know and I'll see if I can do it for you
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