I had to go down to the fourth entry in the dictionary
before I got to the definition I wanted.
Trog-lo-dyte – 4. An extremely old-fashioned or conservative person; a reactionary.
Having made that researchical effort, I will now insist, hopefully
persuasively, that “troglodyte” is not what I am.
I can imagine the term “troglodyte” being applied to people
who do not believe in evolution, but I do,
so, in that context at least, that is
demonstrably not me.
Descended from monkeys? Fine with me. I mean, it's not like they're coming to the Seder!
In recent times, however, the word “troglodyte” has enjoyed
a renewed currency as a pejorative against people who are deficient in their
technological abilities and refuse to make any effort to improve them.
That is me.
I have only during this past year learned to use the clothes
dryer (our housekeeper was vacationing in El Salvador and I had run out of
underwear), though (since she’s been back for months and I have been relieved
of this responsibility), I have now forgotten how, and when the necessity arises,
I will need to be retrained.
Do I refuse to make any effort to improve my high-tech
skills?
I would have to admit that I do.
But not because I am ideologically opposed to new technology
– who would be against “faster and easier”?
(With the exception of the electric razor, which continues to suck.)
I refuse to try to improve my high-tech skills, because, at
this point, I am so far behind, I see no way in hell of ever catching up. So I simply throw in the towel, and I permanently
opt out.
This decision is hardly without consequence. The “Embarrassment Factor” is
substantial. A friend who works for the FX Network sends me DVD’s of the Louie show, because she thinks I’ll
enjoy them. And I probably would. If I were conversant with the method of
switching my TV to the “input” you have to switch it to so it stops showing
television shows and transmits DVD material instead, and I’m not.
I have not watched any of the Louie DVD’s my friend sent me, though when she asks if I have, I
reply with an enthusiastic “Yes!”, adding,
“And I enjoyed them very much.”
My retro-techno
situation is hardly a source of pride. I
feel like an adult illiterate, who, when asked to look over a document before
signing it, confides weakly, almost secretively,
“Ah caint read.” (I
wish there was a button for “the opposite of italics”, reflecting a softer than
normal volume of communication. Control S – for Shame.)
It’s an unfortunate predicament, becoming increasingly more
so with every upgrade and new invention.
But what can I do?
Imagine a First Grader who, say, was in a serious car
accident, and, months later, when they finally recover, they return to school,
only to find that their classmates are confidently printing and understanding entire
words, while they – having been absent when they were taught – have not yet
learned the alphabet.
That’s exactly how it feels to me, minus the car
accident. It is virtually impossible to
catch up. Some of us don’t even
try.
I got technologically frozen somewhere around the transistor
radio. After that, it’s not that I fell behind; it’s that more
techno-stuff kept coming, and I remained in one place.
Now, I stand permanently in the future’s dust. As the i-Phone
5 comes on the market, I am still using my “flip-phone” – all of whose
“apps”, besides calling and listening, I have no idea how to use.
The monthly bill for my “flip-phone” is eighteen dollars and
forty-eight cents. You probably find
that low. I find it excessively high.
I would estimate, ninety-seven percent of the time, my
“flip-phone” sits plugged in on a table in our front hallway. Sometimes there’s a message on the little
screen, which, through trial and error, I have determined is telling me to stop leaving it plugged in. And, for God’s sake, use it!
To me, paying more than two hundred dollars a year for a
phone that just sits on a table seems like an enormous waste of money. I’ve been told that my plan includes twenty-five
minutes of phone usage. Last month, I apparently
only used two.
Eighteen dollars for two-minutes. It’s like I called “Long Distance” to Reykjavik.
I only have a “flip-phone”, because, in our interconnected
era, you are required to have something. There are occasions, when I am instructed to
take my phone along when I leave the house.
That right there explains my
two two-minute-per-month phone-usage record.
I almost never leave the house.
The following is a “Techno-Tally”, representing a partial
list of things I, either partially or entirely, do not know how to work (and a
couple I do.) Not all of them are computerized,
though, actually, in fact, they may be.
What do I know?
Okay, here we go:
Any device whose name starts with a lower-case “i”? – Can’t use it.
My flip-phone – for calling and receiving calls only.
I get notice of a “Missed Call.”
It stays “missed” forever.
Desktop Computer – I can do “Word”, I can copy the document
to my blog, and I can “embed” from Youtube,
though not always on the first try. I may be able to “link”, I’m not sure. But that’s it. And I know that desktops can do a lot more
than that.
Laptops – Yes, but sometimes, I do something, and it all
disappears. This is frustrating. You spend three hours writing something, and
suddenly, it’s gone and you have no idea how to get it back. That never
happened with a legal pad and a pen!
I know that phones and computers have thousands of “apps”,
and I know what “apps” are; they’re applications. I just don’t know how to get to them. I would probably enjoy some of those “apps.” But they are beyond my reach, hiding in the
machinery.
I have never texted.
Flip-phones don’t text. And even
if they did, there’s the inevitable issue of finger dexterity.
Fax Machine – pretty much, yes, except I can never recall if
the document goes “Face up” or “Face down.”
If I do it wrong, the fax-ee
gets blank paper.
TV – Sure. But don’t
ask me to switch the “inputs.”
Land line – I cannot consistently use the “Intercom.” And sometimes I put someone on “Hold”, and it
goes to “Dial-Tone.”
Washer and dryer – I used
to know. Maybe I could know again.
Digital Clock – I dread the semi-annual time changes. Exception: On my DVD-clock-radio, there’s a button for
that. I know how to push it.
Stove – Yes.
Microwave – Theoretically, yes. But no matter how long it’s in there, the
food invariably comes out unevenly warmed, except for the microwavable dish, which burns my fingers.
Cuisinart – Please.
Dishwasher – No.
Coffee Maker – Bean grinding – no; making it from ground coffee – no.
Waffle Iron – Sometimes.
Switching on our hot tub – fifty-fifty.
Electric can opener – No.
My car – Yes, unless it stops working.
A category I will lump together as “Audio Equipment” – No.
Karaoke Machine – Yes.
A partial list. I
suppose there’s a class I could take at some community college to upgrade my techno-savvy. Have
You Been Cryogenically Frozen, Or Something? 101. But it would have to be
nearby. My ’92 Lexus has no GPS. Dr.
M’s Prius does.
But I have no idea how it works.
Soooo, on the troglodyte issue, that's a YES?
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