A
few days ago our family DSL line was disconnected for no reason that we, or the
Internet provider, could figure out. DH’s polite phone call to the service
center was answered with an equally polite admission of some technical mishap,
but sorry-can’t-fix-it. A technician will have to come to the house, and oh, so
sorry, the earliest will be a week from now. By the time I’ll post this our
connection would have been restored. But I wanted to record this moment.
Besides, what else does a writer do?
The
experience of a super-wired household losing connectivity is both stressful and
illuminating. In the grand scheme this is not even a dot, no dot com either.
But holding a flashlight and surveying the situation revealed this picture.
Us:
two teenagers, one tech-savvy adult, one writer, and a temperamental fluffy
cat.
Two
teens- flailing, trying to figure out how to do their homework. This is not an
excuse. Who knew that high-schools and colleges now assign homework online, and
some of it can only be done on the Internet.
DH-
feeling not only disconnected, but disrespected. Getting a ‘good deal’ from an
Internet provider that turns out to mean lousy service can do this even to the
most polite and accommodating. Muttering to self a lot.
Writer-
I find myself wondering if there’s a story in this. At least a blog post
(this!) for sure. Wondering how many people think I am mad at them or plain
cold for not answering their Emails.
Fluffy
Cat- she’s faring the worst, absorbing all those irritated-but-holding-it-in vibrations.
That is a cat specialty- to sense her humans’ condition.
Something
knocked on the door of my memory house. I recall my early childhood in Israel
before anyone on our block had a telephone. I’m not that ancient. Most Israelis
did not have private phones until the sixties, and even then, the country was
wired slowly.
How
did we do things then?
Earliest
memory: We were the first to have our own telephone, and neighbors lined up at
our door to use it. They brought coins to cover our cost, and my mother waved
their offerings. What are neighbors for? Everyone wanted to make a call even
though there were few who could receive their calls. For a couple of years
there was an almost steady line at our apartment door. It was a neighborhood
meeting. A block party that went on and on.
This
memory, surely distorted by time and glossed over by a polishing cloth of
sentimentality, made me
wonder: were we less connected then?