I have forgotten how to surf.
I used to be quite good at it. I could do it for hours on
end, as time seemingly stood still until at last I came up for air realising that
I was suddenly hungry or cold. These days I can barely manage ten minutes at a
time.
We’re talking internet surfing here. If you ask me, it’s not
entirely my fault. The decline in my agility is largely the result of the feeds
delivered by a mob of little round-edged squares. Using a secret password,
these guys have infiltrated the mini computer in my handbag, which, in medieval
times, was once used for calling people. The bosses, Frankie “fb” Baloney and Enzo
“Insti” Gramma, have convinced me that I’m no good at it anymore, that I can’t
choose my own adventure in cyberspace. Their power is so influential and
far-reaching that I now seem to spend 90% of my time online looking at content
they’ve arranged for me instead. And I, like a poor sucker paying protection
money, thank them as I pay their ever-increasing costs.
Don’t get the wrong idea, these mafiosi know how to put on a
feast. Delicious, tantalising and moreish in every way. The trouble is, I have
stopped feeding myself. I have come to rely on others to feed me. But it isn’t
always what I need and it certainly isn’t all that there is to eat.
I am now so conditioned that if Frankie or Enzo or any of
their square amici haven’t mentioned it, then it hasn’t happened and isn’t
worth thinking about. And, since these boys are all so nicely configured for
use on a 9cm by 5cm surface, like the rest of the modern world I now use my
phone for most of my internet use. Too bad most of the content out there doesn’t
have an icon on my home screen. Trust me, I enjoy having access to the entire
world from my pocket, and knowing that I won’t get lost if I take a wrong turn
somewhere between Booyong and Pearces Creek, but I don’t like the feeling that my
mini computer is the only computer. My eyes get sore as the phone gets closer
and closer to my face in order to combat my self-imposed long-sightedness. My
fingers don’t always hit the right millimetre of the screen on a site that
isn’t configured for smartphones, and so I give up on the internet as though it
has nothing to offer me.
Meanwhile my big, shiny desktop computer waits patiently for
me in the back room, like a border collie outside a shop. On the odd occasion
that I do venture the 6 metres from my lounge room to where this sleek monolith
sits, I feel a sense of heaviness as if I am procrastinating writing a 3000-word
essay. Since I am now so used to having content given to me on a platter, or
rather a saucer, I forget what it was that I’d gone in there to look at. Stuck
for what to actually use the internet for apart from banking, I leave the room
feeling disappointed. Where I used to surf happily for hours finding
information, going down rabbit holes or wasting time as my heart desired, now
Google’s blank search box is powerless under my vacant stare.
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