After World War III

My mother told me a lot about the past, of the Dark Days with technology and the internet. She talked about the Third World War, which hardly anyone had survived. “Before the war, people only let their machines and technology think for them instead of using their brains themselves,” my mother used to say.

Before WWIII, human beings were too dependent and when everything, all their systems, their computers, their technology, all of it was destroyed in one swoop, they were incapable. They didn’t know how to survive without technology and without electricity. The connection to nature had completely vanished and so most of them died of thirst or starvation, if they had not already died in battles with other survivors.

“People had no heart,” my mother said. They had destroyed everything. Nature and above all, each other. They had known what they were doing, but they had never thought about the future. They had never thought of those who came after them. They never thought of us, their children and grandchildren.
People were stupid, was one of my mother’s favorite phrases. They were so stupid as to trust technology more than people.

In our lives, it looked completely different. We lived in small communities where each family owned a house and their own piece of land. After a large part of the entire population had died during the war, there was enough for everyone. There was enough, space, enough water, and enough food. At least it was like that in our area. We didn’t know what the situation was like on the other side of the globe. My mother suspected that everyone was dead there, “And if not, they won’t live long anyway with all these poisons,” my mother liked to mock.

When I asked her whether people could have known in the past with their technology what was happening on the other continents and in the more distant countries, she answered ” Yes, technology knew everything. Technology and the internet were the most powerful tools of mankind. They were too powerful even for humans. It has dragged them into a deep abyss from which hardly anyone could get out.”

For me, it was unthinkable that there were still people living out there. We had our own universe here. Everything else was dead, bare, and contaminated.

But we women stayed at home anyway, it was dangerous out there. Father always said that we women couldn’t handle the animals. The terrible creatures that had survived the war of humans were mostly mutations. A form of wildlife that nature would never have wanted.

The young and healthy men in our community went hunting or they were tending the fields, while the older and weak searched nearby for usable materials. My mother said that people in the past would never have walked like our men do today. They would have had everything they needed sent to them by drone or car, or they would have sat in their hi-tech rooms in front of a screen and destroyed our world even more.

Sometimes our search parties would come back with things we really needed. Matches, candles, firewood, blankets, and clothes, but most of the time they returned only with unusable scrap or empty hands.
The Seekers knew they were going to die out there, but it made them proud. Nobody wanted to lie sick in bed and burden the others, everyone wanted to do something until the end finally came.

Some women wanted to go with the search parties but were not allowed to. The men were responsible for the physical, strenuous work, and the women for the house, the children, and education. The men taught their sons to hunt and plow, and the women taught their daughters how to cook, how to store food, how to raise their offspring, and how to read, calculate, and write. No girl could hunt and no boy could read.

People in the past could no longer write by hand, my mother often complained. They had their computers into which they typed everything and none of them were able to get proper letters on paper anymore. Now reading and writing were so important because we had to record everything. All our findings had to be written down for the generations after us. Back then, before the Third World War, people did not appreciate such insights. Instead of continuing their education, they made things up. My mother called it entertainment. She kept saying the word with disgust, she said it had blinded people.

When my mother explained what a television was, I just shook my head in disbelief. Humans had invented a technique that allowed them to look at other people for hours!

The world back then was a bad one, my mother scolded. Everyone wanted more and more, wanted too much. They wanted things they could never have. They were greedy. Inconsiderate. And at the same time so stupid that they left everything to technology. We’re doing better, my mother said.

In our community, everything was exchanged or given away. My mother told me about the money one evening. I found the idea of paying for everything with paper or lumps of metal terrible. At least that had been the case in the past, because just before the war, money had only been available in people’s computers and other devices. People were addicted to it, they could never have enough of it. Even those who were rich and could buy everything wanted more and wished for more and more. If the rich had given something to the poor, there would have been no rich and poor at all.

It was so difficult for me to understand these people. “They were crazy,” my mother just said. They were completely outlandish. No one back then knew what they were doing, but everyone did it and everyone cared only for themselves.

The family as I know it today didn’t exist back then. Everyone thought about themselves, there was no room for others. People cheated and lied to each other. It must have been terrible to live in such a world.

What my mother demonized the most was this “Internet”. It has destroyed the lives of so many people, she said. People felt more connected to each other on a screen and as a result, they created an ever greater distance.

People could no longer live without their technical devices and the Internet because they were addicted to it. Their whole lives, everything they did, was connected to technology in some way. A life like the one we are living now would have been unimaginable for them.

They would have believed that without technology you can not live a satisfied life.

But this is not true, because sometimes a small step backward is a big step forward. Sadly, they didn’t know!

The End!

Daily writing prompt
Your life without a computer: what does it look like?

26 Comments

  1. One good thing about most of the human race dying off is the space; no need for mortgages, no one to pay rates and taxes to, but you would need to know how to grow food and hunt!

    October 13, 2024
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  2. Unknown's avatar leigha66 said:

    The future is more and more uncertain daily and one thing that would cripple us would be taking our technology away. It would certainly be a different world. Nice write Bridget!

    October 4, 2024
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  3. Your “mother” was gifted with prescience

    October 3, 2024
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  4. My life without a computer, or an I-camera/phone/computer/game console/movie screen/tv news/communication device?

    It would be a lot less complicated. I would get lots of knitting and crochetting done.

    On the other hand, I would not have access to fascinating things such as pictures from space, scientific discoveries, wonderful fiction and non fiction books, recipes.

    I might write more letters, and maybe my family would write to me.

    Every tool we develop has a good and a bad consequence. Our advances in medicine allow us to survive longer. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? Living long enough to accomplish our goals, or outliving our usefulness and purpose? The discoveries we make on our extraplanetary excursions bring new information and new tools to make our lives fuller. Sometimes too full. We have the technology to feed everyone on the planet, yet we throw away tons of food. We have the technology to predict earthquakes, and then we cause them with fracking. We could clean up the oceans or we could fill them with microplastics. Two sides to every coin.

    October 2, 2024
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  5. What wonderful, yet scary, writing Bridget. It is so close to what many of us fear for the future. One good thing about computers and the internet though – if it didn’t exist I would have never known of your existence and, if that were the case, my life would have been that much poorer!

    October 2, 2024
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    • Oh how I wish we could meet in real life. You are a very sweet man and I am very glad we met. I miss your poems and your word plays. I hope your are doing alright.

      October 2, 2024
      Reply
  6. Unknown's avatar bevnewman said:

    Oh my! Excellent writing, terrifying yet bringing a timely reminder of where we may be headed. Thank you 🙏🏻

    October 2, 2024
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    • Thank you so much. I appreciate you taking your time to comment on my little utopian story.

      October 2, 2024
      Reply
  7. Unknown's avatar kagould17 said:

    You captured it all Bridget, including the whole dystopian disfunction that exists in today’s society and human interaction. AI will only make us less able to cope with any impending disaster. If you have not yet done so, you may wish to read the Silo series by Hugh Howey. It shows how twisted it can all become.

    I do believe in the old saying….the 4th world war will be fought with sticks and rocks.

    Let us hope there is yet time to pull back from the brink.

    Allan

    October 2, 2024
    Reply
    • “Dystopian disfunction” what a scary and brilliant way to describe the world we live in today. I think many of us see (and fear) the world we live in right now.

      We, as society don’t take the time to adjust. The changes in the last twenty years have been breathtaking and wonderful, but too much happened to fast.

      Thank you for reading.

      October 2, 2024
      Reply
  8. Unknown's avatar Liz said:

    A brilliant post and yes, as John said regarding the truth in your words, I agree.

    October 2, 2024
    Reply
  9. Unknown's avatar ohhhlourd said:

    Oh man, I hope you keep this piece going! It is so so good! And I often find myself thinking that internet/social media is really creating a greater distance than keeping us close. It’s easier to hit a button, instead of picking up the phone and having a conversation, or even writing a letter. I really enjoyed your piece, as someone who remembers life before the internet, this hit home and I ponder this often. You wrote something that most of us are thinking, just too busy scrolling to think for ourselves! Thank you.

    October 2, 2024
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    • Oh, thank you so much for reading and for commenting. I am glad to know that many of you liked my little ‘story’. I myself have been limiting my phone usage dramatically, after a customer texted me at 10 pm on Saturday, because he thought it was a good time.

      It was too easy to write. Perhaps it’s not difficult for my generation to understand that not all we changed is or was for the better.

      I remember life before the internet as well, and while I enjoy the connection to the world, I miss the quieter times. Things that I had to look up in books, or research for days, I never forgot. Today we all get too much information .

      I should make it a series 🙂

      October 2, 2024
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      • Unknown's avatar ohhhlourd said:

        You should make it a series! I am in agreement with your perspective on money, I have small children and I try to explain money to them and how we will go down in history for not ending world hunger because it isn’t “cost effective” and mainly overall greed. I contemplate my life choices on a daily basis due to how the world is going, lets try to hope or manifest for the best… Your words are powerful, keep writing!

        October 3, 2024
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        • Thank you so much! I always knew I wasn’t the only one, there had to be someone else 🙂
          I bothers me since 20 years that we could end world hunger, but we don’t because there is no profit in it. It’s shameful.

          October 3, 2024
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      • You are so very welcome💙
        It’s always my pleasure!

        October 3, 2024
        Reply
  10. Unknown's avatar SelmaMartin said:

    Totally. Totally awesome write. This grabbed me good. Love your acuity in this piece that leaves sonorous echoes after the last word read. It’s so complete, this. Thanks so much. Just totally awesome. 👏🏽

    October 2, 2024
    Reply
    • Thank you so much Selma. It kind of wrote itself. The last sentence took me the longest. How do you end a story like this?

      I am glad you liked the ending as well.

      October 2, 2024
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      • Unknown's avatar SelmaMartin said:

        The ending is most perfect, Bridget. Wonderful. Please let me reblog this later. 🙏
        Wish I had written this (but I couldn’t, really 🤣) bless you

        October 2, 2024
        Reply
  11. Unknown's avatar John said:

    A wonderful post, there’s a lot of truth in your words. This reminds me of that Elon Musk guy who has millions to buy Twitter and make it X, imaging how much good he could have done with that much money for other people. So sad.

    October 2, 2024
    Reply
    • Elon Musk is certainly a good example on how to waste money. It’s scary how much the rich spend mindlessly and selfishly, when so many have nothing or are close to having nothing.

      October 2, 2024
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      • Unknown's avatar John said:

        Precisely, and I find it so disgusting. Just being honest…

        October 2, 2024
        Reply

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