Somehow in the last couple years, I accumulated four short-sleeve henley shirts from American Giant, purveyors of almost everything that goes on the upper half of my body for the last decade or so. And in sorting through the closet, it occurs to me that the last time I had even one of those was thirty years ago.
It was a different worls altogether. One where “mobile internet” meant you had a laptop with a PCMCIA modem card in it capable of 14.4Kbps dialup and a provider you could connect with, and “mobile phone” meant something that if you were lucky could fit in a coat pocket and wasn’t that much larger than a checkbook. And more than that, it was an era where my friends were still the ones I knew in person, such as they were, because I hadn’t yet subscribed to that email list. I knew it existed, but that’s about all, and I was circling it slowly like a porch cat before taking the plunge.
“Such as they were” is a load-bearing term. My few high-school friends were scattered to the winds, from Charlotte to New Orleans, and my college friends…well, there weren’t any, really, save for the problem girlfriend I was still too weak and scared to cut loose. And she was slowly poisoning my career, my ability to connect with other people, and ultimately doing me a favor, I suppose – steadily tearing down the old world so that when the time came to step into the new one, there wouldn’t be anything for me to cling to.
Thirty years ago, More than half a life. It’s a lot to wrap my head around, especially with the world so completely transformed. Even the stuff I carried in my pockets when I left DC is reduced by more than half thanks to the iPhone (okay, and no longer smoking a pipe routinely) and I could arguably go to the pub with nothing but my watch and a house key under the right circumstances. Which is pretty close to what I would walk to the Overcup with in days gone by.
It was a smaller world, a simpler world, a world at a more human scale. I miss that. It’s something I look forward to in retirement, something I enjoyed in my brief spell of pre-tirement. I hope the world lasts long enough to give it another chance.
