All right, then… it’s been almost 6 months since we moved into this house and lost the luxury of a home Internet connection. Now we finally have it again and I can actually refer to an Internet connection at home as a luxury, rather than a necessity.

Okay, maybe I really don’t believe that. I NEED the Internet. I absolutely need an endless supply of baby animal videos and 10 different columns of nonstop gibberish on Twitter. I require endless stream of commentary on current events to keep me up-to-date and a steady torrent of jingoist YouTube videos on my Facebook news feed to remind me to be patriotic. I MUST have IMDB handy every time I’m watching a movie and can’t remember where I’ve seen that actor’s face before. I fucking NEED Wikipedia to be there every time I have the slightest question about every trivial event or mysterious fruit I happen upon in the produce section.

I can’t get on with my life until I’ve used Wiki to unlock the mysteries of the fingered citron.

These things are IMPORTANT.

Well, until you go for several months without them.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I do have a need for the Internet. I’ve been in France for almost 6 years and while it feels like home, I still have another home on another continent. I miss friends and relatives who I communicate with regularly online. I have to be online to blog, to work with my writing workshop via email and to work with online literary magazines so I can add to my ever-growing pile of rejections.

I do have a legitimate need, but after 6 months of disconnection, I have a better view of how much of the Internet is a fucking waste of time. I can look back at how unhealthy information overload really is. Yeah, the ‘net is a tool, but it’s also a luxury and a bunch of bullshit.

So, what did I do with all of that free time?

Books. I read books. Well, I read books before, but I started knocking down my “to-read” pile a little faster than normal while also re-reading a few non-fiction books just to get my nerd on.

I got a sewing machine. No, I didn’t know how to sew or anything and at first, I realized that I couldn’t YouTube any instructional videos, so I had to employ a primitive method of reading the instruction manual from beginning to end, then just figuring the rest out for myself. Get this: it worked. No, no… seriously. It did. I put things in it, sewed them together and made new things. I shit you not.

The Wire. I finally got around to watching all 5 seasons. To be honest, by the time I finished the first season, the strange twitch I had developed as a result of Internet withdrawal subsided. You know why? Omar Fucking Little, that’s why.

Making better use of your time than just about anything else since 2002.

I worked in the garden. I picked cherries from our cherry tree in the summer and raked up the leaves from underneath it in the fall. I put my cat on her leash and sat in my backyard eating strawberries from our garden while doing nothing except for watching the birds and listening to the wind in the trees. What I’m saying is… I went outside. For no reason other than to be outside.

It felt strange, but I did it.

I cleaned the house a lot more than I normally would. I polished all of the brass. I bought some old objects from nearby brocantes (kind of like a flea market) and cleaned them up. I baked bread and a cake. Just for the hell of it. (This is relevant because I’m not one for baking. Cooking, yes. Baking, no.)

Even though we only had 6 channels until about a month ago, I decided to give French TV a try since I never really watch it and it’s a good way to hone a second language. While I was pleasantly surprised by the lack of shitty courtroom TV and talk shows, I was disappointed to see how much French daytime TV is really just lame American TV dubbed in French. Trust me, those trite Lifetime movies and TV shows from the 70’s don’t get any better with French dubbing. Then again, they can’t really get worse, either.

Yep. Still corny.

I wrote some stuff. But, something strange happened there. My internal motor that normally produces flash fiction began to sputter and lag. Each time I sat down with pen and paper to write a small piece of flash, I ended up with 5 or 6 pages. Is this what happens to people who live offline all the time? Are their attention spans longer? Are they actually able to focus on a single task for more than 90 seconds ALL THE TIME?

After all of this — and more that I haven’t even bothered to mention — I realized that part of me liked not having the Internet.

After a few months, I dusted off my unused cell phone and handed it over to my husband, who in return handed me a smartphone. With our phones, we had a very slow, very weak 3G connection. Just enough to keep in touch with people online and to occasionally refer to Wikipedia in an effort to win an argument.

Occasionally, I would think to myself, “Damn, this real-life, going outside and spending time more constructively thing is incredible. Who needs the Internet?”

Well, I do. The problem with the Internet, is once you have that much information and convenience at your fingertips, you can’t go back. Not really. If you had bothered to read Flowers for Algernon instead of posting your planking pics on Facebook, you would have already learned this lesson. (Another upside of being offline: I just learned about the planking fad a few days ago.)

But, now we’re connected. My ass is once again parked in front of my 15″ monitor. I’ve got a high speed connection, several tabs and applications open and a super fast WiFi connection all through the house. Now, we’ll see if my expanded attention span will stick, or if like Charlie in Flowers for Algernon, I regress back to my previous state.

Fuck it. It’s too much to think about. I’m going outside.

5 Comments

  • The internet is like a never ending Truman Show. As long as it’s on, we’re going to be there, eyes glued. In another universe, someone has written about our information obsessed world and and at the end of the book, the protagonist uploads some nasty code to burn up all the cables to a crisp and the internet goes dark. The population blinks at their screens and rubs their bleary eyes. The ending scene has one scruffy bespectacled oaf look over to drawn curtain at the bold bright sunbeam on their kitchen floor. He walks out his front door in his robe and slippers, looks down and wishes he didn’t cancel his newspaper subscription so he would have something to read. He would totally post about it on FB if he could.

  • Hubby

    Awesome post. I missed these posts, while I paddling through this sheet creek with you.
    Just for evrybody to know that Rasmenia’s husband is not that stingy, please note that Rasmenia’s screen is 19” not 15” thank you very much

  • Rasmenia

    It’s true. We’re all watching the Truman Show while simultaneously playing an active role in it. As long as I’m connected, I suppose I’ll continue to watch & participate… on my colossal 19″ screen.

  • French TV is not without merits. I’m watching TF1 right now. Seems to be a lack of originality though, for a country of 60 mil people or so. All of the shows are either dubbed American/Brit/Aussie shows, or are knockoffs, like the French Price is Right. Except that the bald guy that hosts it leers at the female contestants and occasionally gropes them, behavior which would land Bob Barker on the cover of the National Enquirer and a $1.2 million judgement against him. But the French girls just giggle. c’est francais.

  • I won’t say I couldn’t exist without IMDB and Wikipeda, but life would certainbly be more difficult than it is. Ten columns in Twitter? I can’t even process that image. My Twitter only appears in one column, and no one ever says anything remotely worth reading, which explains why I only log on to the thing once a month or so. I’ve heard that French shower gel commercials can be very interesting.

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