“A Life That’s Not Recorded”: 40 Things People Miss About Life Before Smartphones Took Over
Imagine calling your boyfriend, girlfriend, or crush, and their parent picks up. An awkward conversation follows before you finally get to talk (or whisper) to the actual person you just phoned. That's if you aren't told to call back another time because they're busy, it's 'too late,' or it's a school night.
It might sound cringe, but that was standard for many of us who grew up in the days before smartphones. And if we weren't making the call from a big bulky phone plugged into the wall, it's not unlikely we'd popped a few pennies in a payphone hoping they'd give us enough minutes to say all we needed to.
If you aren't part of the 'payphone generation,' it might all seem a bit weird to you. But believe it or not, many of us would argue that there were a lot of benefits to growing up without being able to send an instant message or call home at any time, from anywhere.
Someone recently asked, "For people who grew up before smartphones, what is something that the newer generation won’t get to experience?" and the internet didn't disappoint. No less than 15,000 nostalgic replies came forward, many likely (and ironically) sent from smartphones.
Bored Panda has put together a list of the best. Don't forget to upvote your favorites and let us know in the comments below whether you feel life is better with, or without mobile phones. We also explored what it's like to live a little without a smartphone in the digital age. You'll find that info between the images.
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A life that’s not recorded. The ability to make mistakes and not have them follow you online for the rest of your life. They’ll never grasp the level of anonymity we enjoyed as a society. .
Was browsing new phones yesterday, and literally the biggest feature it touted was three separate lenses with front and rear capabilities. Can I call and text? That's what I really need.
That seems to be an afterthought. They may have come as far as they can with the phone aspect. When are they going to make them more secure? That, to me, is the question. Since we do so much with them, when will they work to make them more secure?
Load More Replies...For good and bad. I think we only learned about the level of police brutality because of smartphones. But definitively happy that my stupid blunders are not out there! :D
To me, it is the time not being online in general. But being outside, playing, biking, whatever.
You can still be quite anonymous if you don't upload photos of every phucking minute of your uninteresting life
And how do you stop others from uploading pictures of your least fine moments? Adults can say "please don't" and generally get listened to but teens - not so much
Load More Replies...Ah, the good old days. A carefree era when we were often uncontactable, and unrecorded, while out and about. What a time to be alive. As many of the replies here prove, smartphones seem to have stolen some of our freedom. And a bit of our fun.
I was lucky enough to have been part of the 'pay phone generation.' I remember a few placed around my primary school. I also remember how amazed we were when the more 'modern' version hit the streets. Suddenly you didn't constantly have to carry coins around all the time. Nor did you have to keep popping more coins into the box every time you heard the beep signalling your call was about to be cut.
You could now simply load airtime onto a card and voila, so many problems solved all at once. Boy, did we think we were cool. It was like another giant step for mankind. Never in our wildest dreams did us kids think that one day we'd be able to carry a tiny phone around with us, make a call from (almost) anywhere. And we for sure didn't anticipate being able to video call from a device just a bit bigger than that payphone card.
Going to a concert and actually watching the concert with your eyes, not through a screen trying to “capture” the experience.
Most artists now personally film one of their shows to monetize them, like comedians do. I don't understand why people do it, unless they're going to forget it somehow.
And the sound quality sucks anyway! I absolutely hate clicking on a Youtube video only to find out it was from a phone and the audio is the pits.
Load More Replies...The last time I saw Pearl Jam (yeah, a long time ago) we had "fan club" seats, very close. There was a guy 2 seats to my left who was HAMMERED. About a half hour into the show he toppled over like a cut tree and (of course) landed right on me. What's the point in spending $$$ to see a show if you're so drunk you don't remember it?
Load More Replies...Taylor Swift made a film of one of her shows, I think in Chicago. I got to watch her concert without the 7 1/2' man in front of me blocking the stage, and the group of women with cameras up blocking the screen. It was a good show. For $30.00, I could sit comfortably on my couch, with drinks, snacks, and a bathroom conveniently located right there. I thoroughly enjoyed the concert. My granddaughter, her fiancé, and her friends went to the concert live. They had a great time. They had to deal with traveling, getting to and from the stadium, and long lines for food and restrooms. My way of seeing the concert is better.
I record 20 sec and take a couple of photos. Then save it on Google drive
The closest I've come to those childhood days of being smartphone-free was when I checked into a meditation center high up in the mountains. It wasn't because of a lack of network, but rather because I was there for a 10-day Vipasanna retreat. If you're unfamiliar with the word, it's basically a silent retreat. Lots of meditation, no talking, no eye contact, no reading, and no phones.
I think that was the hardest part for a lot of the people who took part, especially the ones with kids. In fact, by the second and third day already, I watched people quietly pick up their meditation mats and pillows and slink out the door. They never returned. They had gone to pack their bags, picked up their phones and car keys from reception, and hotfooted it all the way back home.
I almost did the same at one point, but I pushed through. The whole point, after all, is to learn that 'this [insert whatever painful, uncomfortable feeling or experience] too will pass.
The joy of slamming a phone receiver down in someone's ear when they pissed you off. It wasn't just the "click" of a call disconnecting. There was an actual, loud BANG when you did it. Very satisfying in the moment.
The busy signal that meant you couldn't reach someone because they were on the phone was frustrating, but looking back at it now, it kept our lives more simple than they are now.
When I was younger and had a Nokia I used to hit the bottom on a desk or like before hanging up to get the same bang sound.
Even better: if the annoying person kept calling and you knew who it was, you just pick up the receiver and let it drop back on the base. Over and over and over.....😈
By the end of the 10 days, when the bell rang and we were finally allowed to speak to each other, the one thing I remember is seeing a lot of tears of relief. The other is that instead of face-to-face conversations, many people rushed to get their phones, so they call home or whoever they'd been thinking of. To check if the outside world still stood as it had when they checked in so many days earlier. God forbid, we'd all missed some massive breaking news.
I too fetched my phone. But I didn't make any calls for at least a few hours. I still remember, quite vividly, how strange the device felt in my hand, how big and bright the text on it looked, and how even owning or using a phone seemed like a distant memory, and a skill I'd need to brush up on.
I also knew that once I switched on my phone, the peace and quiet would be gone. I'd be inundated with messages from everyone who had been trying to reach me, a journalist who was expected to be contactable 24/7.
The lack of pressure. I was a teen in the 80s. I have told my kids (who are teens) I wish they could have one summer in 1986 just so they could experience what life is like without the contestant firehose of social media posts and ads and messages... and expectation that you have to constantly check your socials and post about your awesome life.
Teens now live under the weight of insane social pressure.
I tearfully agree with the parent. I don't want to say "technology bad" but it certainly killed some genuinely nice things.
My step kids seem genuinely afraid to try anything - turns out they are terrified someone will post photo/video of them not being instantly good at it online. Apparently even their mom does this because she thinks it's "funny"
Load More Replies...1986 was the last of 3 years I was bullied so heavily in school that I thought about kil*lling myself every day. Nothing was done because "bullying" wasn't a concept yet (and my mother didn't give a s**t). No pressure, my a**e!
Things were definitely different then. I was also bullied pretty badly in school. It's not so much that it wasn't a "thing" yet, it's that it was encouraged by teachers and parents because it built character and perseverance. That kid is beating you up? Sounds like a you problem kid, fight back. Might makes right
Load More Replies...Half of that summer will be them detoxing. Better make it two to fully appreciate it.
You could go to the record store (or movie rental store), shop for music, and there would be other people there who liked the same music as you. Now the record store is on your phone, and there is nobody in there to talk to.
Record stores still exist. They might not be everywhere like they used to be, but you can still have the experience of shopping for records if you want to.
Who downvoted my comment? Was someone somehow offended by the fact that record stores exist?
Load More Replies...I'd be lying if I said the entire Vipassana experience was pleasant. It definitely was not. But one thing I did learn and appreciate was the immense benefit of living sans smartphone, if only for 10 days. I must admit, I'm tempted to try it again - without the 4am wake-up bells, dinners at 4:30pm, super long hours of silent meditation, and sitting still in one spot.
Of course, to me it currently seems impossible. Our smartphones have become an extension of our bodies. We panic if we think we've lost them, or if the battery is about to run flat while we are out.
According to WebMD, research shows that about 61% of people admit they’re addicted to the internet and their digital screens. While another another study found that around 25% of smartphone owners between ages 18 and 44 don’t remember the last time their phone wasn’t right next to them.
Having to memorise the directions for how to get somewhere without GPS maps.
Having to be able to read a map, and understand to give directions to the driver in advance.
As someone who for years ran service calls using a map or printed directions and having near accidents trying to read those directions, I have to say the GPS is much safer to use.
Load More Replies...This sucked too. I can read a map but I never know where I am. Love the GPS!
I didn't memorize the map, I was the map person. I read the map, told Dad/Mom where we were, and how many miles to our destination. I loved it.
AAA TripTix was my go to wev I was traveling long distances. They'd give you a map for every state you were going thru and highlight your route for you.
To get from point A to point B you followed the big streets. With phones I learn more streets.
Being away from your phone isn't a bad thing. "Several social experiments found that taking a scheduled break away from your smartphone or digital device can lower your stress levels," reads the WebMD site. "It can also help you focus on the present and pay more attention to things around you."
Letting go of our phones for some time can also lead to better productivity. Who hasn't put off that task they're meant to do and instead scrolled mindlessly through social media? Our smartphones have become the ultimate accessory in crimes of procrastination.
Having no idea if the pictures you took are any good until they get developed at Walgreens.
I used to send them in the mail and then have to wait for them to come back.
There weren't any Walgrens where I lived, some I sent in to a lab, I did some others locally but it's been a long time.
Calling a boyfriend/girlfriend and having to have an awkward conversation with their parent before getting to talk to them.
In the UK, I lived in Sussex and up until about 1984 we had a four digit phone number (with an area code) but if you were ringing someone close, it was just the four numbers. Also it was a shared line and on occasions you would pick up, hear people talking, then have to wait until they finished, finding out if they had finished by picking up every few minutes.
When I was growing up in Brazil, at least in my city, it wasn't that common for people to have phones, so you would still just call the operator and asked to be connected to so-and-so, and they would connect you.
Load More Replies..."Please, Mrs. Avery, I just gotta talk to her, I'll only keep her a while... and the operator said forty cents more for the next three minutes..." - Dr Hook, Sylvia's Mother https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KfVaommgPLU
Of course, our phones are often also to blame for keeping us up way later than we should be. "When your body knows it’s time for sleep, your brain releases a chemical called melatonin to help you relax and drift off," explains WebMD. "Staring at your phone right before bed keeps your brain alert and active and delays that melatonin release. Lack of sleep over a long period of time can affect your mood and health."
The key to your insomnia may not lie in sleeping tablets, but in a digital detox, especially before bed.
"mom im going to ride my bike" - "ok honey be back before dinner" - proceed to go and get into absolutely ridiculous and often unsafe situations in places my parents didn't even know existed while they had zero way of contacting or finding me and my friends.
"How was riding bikes honey"
"Oh good, we just rode up the bike path to so and sos house and played some video games" as I'm processing some sort of trauma because we just almost got k****d for some reason.
When he was a kid, my brother-in-law came home late one Saturday afternoon. When his mother casually asked where he had been, he told her that he and his friends had ridden their bikes to the Reddy Theater to watch a movie. The Reddy was in another city. In another state.
I rode my bike to the movies with my friends all the time. But the theater was only maybe 15km away. The only issue was all the traffic.
Load More Replies...I followed my friend to a canal that was black as tar. He jumped in for a swim to cool off. I did not. Turned out to be a major toxic chemical dumpsite. Near Love Canal.
No such thing as video games when I was a kid, little sister and I - or by myself - would ride to the local People's D**g (now CVS) or library - when they finally built one nearby.
I grew up in kind of a weird neighborhood where the houses were pretty new, but there was a field right in the middle with a short dirt road that led to an old farmhouse. The old lady that lived there had refused to sell her patch of farmland to developers and ended up living alone back there. She was pretty bitter about having all these neighbors around her and would fiercely defend her home from trespassers including throwing rocks or running out of the house with a shotgun threatening anyone who came close. We kids used to dare each other to get close enough to knock on the door and run. We never told our parents because we knew how much trouble we would get in. I don't know what happened to her, but eventually the land became a neighborhood park.
And a lot of us got killed. How many of those school mates that they told us had "moved away" actually just moved to the graveyard?
What? Where in the hell did you grow up that this was a frequent and normal experience? Hell I grew up in a rough neighborhood outside of Washington DC and nothing like this ever happened.
Load More Replies...But that's not all. Experts say time spent without a smartphone can also do wonders for our physical health. "Staying glued to your smartphone for several hours can lead to eye strain, dry eyes, blurry vision, teary eyes, and headaches," notes WebMD. "You may also hunch over as you look down at the phone or screen. This can cause lower back and neck problems. Disconnecting can provide relief to various parts of your body."
Carrying around a dozen or more phone numbers in your head.
Remember my number from age 7. But do I remember my current husbands number? Nope
Load More Replies...I rember my home number from before we moved when I was six. In 1971. Still have to look up the number I've had the last 5 years
Nope, I find i can use that part of my brain for more important things now.
I still have at least four numbers memorised, which has come in handy when my phone is flat and I have to use someone else's
I still can't believe how many numbers, even as a child, I memorized back then. Now, everything is stored in my phone for a quick "Hey Google...call mom" and the phone does it for me.
Omolara Oseni writes about once doing a 2-week smartphone and digital detox. "I started the detox by suspending all social media and instant messaging apps on my phone using the Android app Freezer, which restricted all notifications and messages from the frozen apps," she explained.
"For a proper smartphone detox, I used a feature phone with just phone call and text functionality. This really took me back to the early 2000s when I didn’t own a smartphone," the journalist continued. "Since I couldn’t do anything that required WiFi or data outside of work, I did all the work that required Internet connectivity at the office."
That song finally comes on the radio, vaulting over your bed to press Record, having each track on your mixtape begin with “…only on Q101!”.
I accidentally clicked the mic off for about 2 seconds when recording a song once back in the 70s. Now when I hear the song on Pandora, it sounds strange to not have that little interruption in the middle.
Always "hearing" the song that came next on your mix tape
Load More Replies...We also did this with our VCRs. I remember I had Die Hard recorded this way. But they also censored stuff for TV audiences. So I remember that iconic line a little differently than everybody else. "Yippy-kai-yay mother [in totally different and flat voice] hater". And Ferris Bueller for me was "you could shove a lump of coal [flat voice] in his fist [regular voice] and in two weeks you'd have a diamond".
And we would try to cut out the commercials by stopping recording when they came on and hoping you were fast enough to start recording again. Sooooo many scenes missing beginnings on our tapes…
Load More Replies...I always wondered if the DJ's job specifically included talking over the intro, and the outro, for copyright protection.
Not specifically, and not for copyright. It was just the fashion in those days.
Load More Replies...There's a radio station in Ontario called Q104 (104.5 FM) which plays 70s-90s music
There’s actually a Q101 in Chicago that was an alt rock station in the 90s-00s! So this is very familiar to me…
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Watching a big season finale at the exact same time as everyone else and then talking about it the next day at school. Having to be home by a certain time to watch a show and timing bathroom breaks with commercials. Cutting out your favorite ads from magazines to decorate your locker.
And the calls of your siblings, "It's OO-OOONNNN!" and you come charging back from the bathroom or kitchen hoping you didn't miss too much.
'Dallas' was so big in South Africa that on Tuesday nights many restaurants just didn't open because everyone was home watching TV.
People not going out on Friday night until after X-files!
Load More Replies...Oseni admits the first few days were difficult, saying she constantly wanted to pick up the phone and check for notifications. By the second week, she'd broken the habit. The writer also says it was a relief to not have to always worry about charging the phone. The battery wasn't being overworked, or pushed to its limits, and lasted longer.
She reveals that as we've indicated before, she got a better night's rest. And her stress levels were lower. Oseni says this is likely because instead of scrolling through social media before bedtime, she spent the time reading. She also found she was getting more work done without the smartphone distracting her. This, in turn, added to her relaxed state.
Getting on your bike and just driving to your friends house not knowing if they are there or not.
Or, seeing 5-7 bikes on the ground in the front yard was an indicator as to where your friends were,
And getting up the nerve to knock on the door and ask if so-and-so is home. We had a friend whose mom yelled at everyone. Really crimped their social life.
"Prior to this, I would pick up my phone without cause to check for notifications. And when there were none, I’d scroll through my contact list and start inconsequential conversations that led nowhere," reveals the writer. "But realising this helped me focus on work, increased my levels of productivity, and made me more sensitive to my environment."
Oseni says she'd recommend a smartphone detox to anyone who feels their phone is taking too much of their time, social media is preoccupying their mind, or if they are continually and habitually reaching for their device. But she adds that it's not necessary to go cold turkey.
Snake.
a phone that could be dropped 3 floors and still work
a battery that would last a week on a single charge
3210 i miss you.
The Motorola Nextel phones that doubled as a walkie talkie. Me and my husband had them (he had one for work and gave me his old one), so easy to just chirp each other. I ran mine over with the riding mower and put a big gash in it. It still turned on, but really didn't work properly anymore.
I still have my 1st Nokia in a drawer and it probably still has 99% battery! 😂
Going to make a call at the pay phone and finding change in the coin return!
My friends & I used to check the coin return slots of every pay phone & newspaper box we came across. We found change in there surprisingly often, and of course back then you could actually buy something with it. A dime got you a single scoop of ice cream at Thrifty, a quarter got you two candy bars at Skaggs.
I haven't thought about Skaggs for years. Thanks for the memory!
Load More Replies......or running out of coins mid-conversation or mid-argument !
Jackpot! On my way to and from school, I would check every pay phone.
Public pay phones were gross. I'd always hold them away from my face and they stank.
It’s okay to start by muting notifications and choosing when you want to check updates, advises the journalist. "It is also okay not to respond to all notifications you receive depending on their order of importance," she adds. "A smartphone detox can also mean keeping your phone out of sight when you’re at work unless it’s necessary you use it."
Oseni concludes that a smartphone detox isn’t just about avoiding something in a certain space. "For some, it gives them a chance to reflect and appraise life’s issues in an order of priority. For others, it’s a journey of self-discovery in relation to some paths of life, career growth, family, and other relationships," she wrote. "For me, it gave me the opportunity to get some rest, focus more, and be more productive."
Having a book mailed to your door with EVERYONE's phone number and address. all public information !
Not mailed, seasonal workers used private vehicles to take to houses. I did it one year.
We still get them where we live but it is only a fraction as thick as it used to be
Ours went from slimmer to non-existent. Weight training required to pick up the Yellow Pages.
Load More Replies...Phone Directory, it was called .... in a galaxy far, far away and many aeons ago.
I remember sitting on two thick LA phone books at Grandma's Thanksgiving table.
I live in a small town in Western North Carolina and our local provider still puts out one every year complete with white (home landline numbers) and yellow pages (business)
We used to use them as booster seats at dinner time when I was little. I remember when I "graduated" from needing two booster phone books to only needing one!
Getting an actual letter from someone, especially love letters.
It's almost cheaper to go and hand deliver it these days!
Load More Replies...Oh, yes. The other day I found one of my diaries about the time I met my later wife... gee. What an excitement "I got a letter today", "I wrote a letter". That was 1988, btw.
Boredom.
Which sounds like a bad thing but actually isn't.
This has not gone away. My best days are home alone with just music.
The freedom of your parents not being able to get ahold of you while you’re out and about with friends.
Summer holiday, out early, round to mates. Football at the park. Twenty aside. Kids joining. Kids leaving. Tap water refreshment, in the Recs toilets (yuck, I know). Crisps, kit kat for sustenance. Play until it started to get dark. Home. Meal that mum had kept warm in the oven. Rinse repeat.
I think kids in the past were more street smart than todays kids. Parents protect them more, but there are good reasons to: traffic is about four times more congested and crazy than when I grew up in the 1960's.
Your boss can't get ahold of you if you don't want them to, and that was perfectly acceptable because it was the norm.
These days many employers expect someone to be available by phone 24/7 and, to me, that's b.s.
BP must have changed the article name; it doesn't reference childhood at all, but I'm presuming it did when you made your comment. They do that a lot.
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Hanging out with friends and having to come up with games outside or stay up late talking about silly things. With the ideas only you and your silly little friends can dream up, influenced by your personal experiences in your day to day life and stories you hear by the spoken word.
My sister and I invented whole worlds. I do wonder if kids are creatively starved these days...
When my daughter was about 12, we drove her up to a week long camp in Virginia. When we picked her up, she had a ton of mosquito bites, was dark tan, and had a blast.
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Reading a shampoo bottle while you're taking a s**t.
I reread the old magazine that's been living in my bathroom for months. Guess I am the only person who never takes her phone to the bathroom.
My Dad always made sure we had a gang of 'adult' 'joke' books, all soft-cover and disposable, in our Can.
Using a payphone to place a collect call and cramming your entire message into the "State your name" pause. "Would you like to accept a collect call from 'MomPickMeUpAtTheMall!!'".
Passing paper notes in class.
If you did get caught, the reading of the note out loud!!
Load More Replies...Now it's phones (Ontario has a phone ban in classes) that are like this. Students sometimes hide them under desks or tables
Engaging with people that are in your presence and not ignoring them for a text conversation.
Same. And if I invite someone over and they too interested in their phone to hang out, they don't get invited back.
Load More Replies...I saw a picture on here, it was 6-8 people sitting at a table in a restaurant. They all had their phones out and were using them. They weren't socializing, just sitting on their phones. I had an idea. You meet your friends for dinner, and you all put your phones on the table. The first person who answers their phone has to buy dinner for the whole table. I thought my solution was perfect. You put your phone on the table so that everyone can see your phone and know when you answer it. The phone stays on the table when you go on potty breaks. Does anybody want to try it? If you do, tell us on Bored Panda.
You won't have a decent dinner conversation if you're constantly being drowned out by the ring tones of unanswered phones.
Load More Replies...Back when texting was gaining traction, that's all my bestie wanted to do. I hated it as I had a flip phone at the time and it was annoying having to punch buttons so many times to get the correct letter, then hitting it accidently and having to go through the letters again.
Latchkey kids, my mom came home from work and caught me playing run-around-the-shoe which is exactly what it sounds like. The rules were whatever I made up right then. But I think mostly we all had to learn to self-entertain by whatever means we had. So, we did a lot of hanging out back in the day or playing ball in the street. Whenever you didn't have something to do, you kind of made something to do. I've noticed that gadget-obsessed people--young and old alike--don't seem to tolerate being bored very well.
Not taking photos of what you see or eat — just enjoying the moment.
Restaurant food doesn't taste as good since people started doing this. Food used to not be as pretty but it tasted way better. Now too many restaurants make it look beautiful but it's doesn't taste as good.
Me and my wife had to compromise, she needs to be ready to take a few like one of each plate and us behind the spread and phone goes down. I used to get so annoyed.
The joys of leaving your home in the morning with a pocket full of coins and knowing that not only were you not expected back until sundown, but they couldn't find you even if they wanted to lol
I can still remember the 6 digit phone numbers of my three closest friends, my parents house at the time, and our next-door neighbours (my parents were over there all the time, especially during summer).
My mom would just yell our names at full volume when she wanted us home. We could hear her for miles lol
And woe be unto you if she had to come out and get you!
Load More Replies...My mother had a distinctive whistle to call all of her children home. Even if we didn't hear it, our friends knew that whistle and would tell us that our mom was calling us home.
Wrapping the phone cord multiple times around your little brother until your Mom yelled at you to stop.
Privacy.
Having a street map in the car and looking up the grid reference for the street.
Being unreachable.
Boy do I miss that! I moved to a really rural area so if I don't feel like answering/texting I just say "Oh, our service up here is so sketchy" after ignoring it for hours. I'll just leave my phone in my bag or on the charger in the other room and walk away . . . . .
Having fun arguing about daft things that you could solve easily by googling. "Who was the actress in such-and-such?" "What year did that happen?"
I miss those daft pub chats.
And conversely tearing your hair out trying to remember such things
Waking up at 3am because you suddenly remembered that random fact
Load More Replies...This was my college experience. We sat around drinking, smoking weed and arguing about things that you could now look up in 10 seconds on the internet.
A peaceful social media-less day.
But then again, I love Bored Panda. It's at my pace, and when I want (I have that freedom), but I'll check in more than I probably should.
This and Reddit is the only SM I have. I only lurk on Reddit though, just looking for answers/fixes for some things.
You only had the TV /radio news or newspapers to tell you what was happening around the world. You had to actively hunt out your news or you would know nothing. Nowadays we're bombarded with information, news, advertising and propaganda constantly. I definitely think life was far less stressful and depressing then in part due to that.
There were also investigative reporters, who'd work hard to get the whole story. They'd cover all sides, even if they didn't agree with them, bc journalistic integrity was important. Newspapers didn't assume their readers were too stupid to form their own opinions from the truth - or as close as the reporter could get to it.
It was. But it was also easier to lie to us. Today it's normal for me when the BBC has some big news, to go online and check how much of what they tell me is true.
No, they're still lying to us and they're much better at the propaganda. You can't believe your eyes anymore, just because there's a photograph or video. Is it AI or photoshop? How can you really know unless you're a professional at it, because it's so well done now. Editing can alter the 'truth' of what's been said or done. Can you believe the media when they all just parrot one another? How about the times well known reporters actually make up stories? Slant, bias and rhetoric are much more nuanced today.
Load More Replies...Yes, our world felt smaller. Now it feels so big and it stresses me out and makes me sad.
Actually, it’s the opposite. The world used to feel huge; we could never know what was happening outside our immediate orbit unless it was a really big deal. Now, everything feels close to home which makes things seem much worse than they really are in most cases.
Load More Replies...The constant presence of ads is maddening. We used to have 15 minutes of TV program, "and now a word from our sponsor" which was maybe 2 minutes (never long enough to go to the can) then the program resumed and no more commercials until the end of the program. You can't get 6 minutes of uninterrupted program now and it's nuts.
Back in the day you couldn’t call someone to ask where they were. If they answered, they were at the location you called. Now anyone can be anywhere.
Born in 78.
Someone brought up what we did on our work breaks before smartphones and that was weirdly kinda nostalgic.
I'd b******t with coworkers, read a magazine, everyone always had a book on hand. As technology advanced, someone with a gameboy/psp the DS was really popular. But sometimes people would just listen to their ipod.
Not trying to be old man things were better back in my day about it... but just carrying around long form content and utilizing it. Like it was easy and encouraged.
Or you'd get like a 15 minute break at work, couldn't really go anywhere, so you'd be sitting in the breakroom and just b******t about the day with other coworkers or get to know them. You were on your break and wanted to relax/unwind so everyone tended to be cordial.
Worked at a grocery store in high school. We used to read so many 'News of the World' issues. Batboy? Wolf girl' Aliens build the pyramids...
When video games didn’t grind and offer in app purchases. Wasn’t a car salesman disguised as entertainment.
Just rocking up at your local bar in your 20s after work and seeing who’s there. I actually got close to a few friends of friends this way. It made me mingle outside my friend zone more. .
The sound of a robot being sacrificed every time you started up the internet.
"Start up the internet." It's like a lawn mower, or a series of tubes, or something.
I have the sound of a US Robotics 28.8k modem connecting as my phone ringtone. At least I think, might be a 2400, I saw a video once years ago with all the most common modem tones and recorded the one most nostalgic for me.
Accepting that you have no clue about which actor was in THAT movie, or whether Tina Turner is dead or just old, or what the weather will be like in 2 weeks...
Rather than "oh, let me google that!"
I'm guilty of it myself, but it's still annoying sometimes. We're having a good conversation, who cares, why pull out your phone now and search for this or that??
On the one hand, it's slightly maddening, on the other, it's totally amazing and I'm still enthralled that I have almost all the knowledge contained in the world right here in my hand. OK, that's hyperbole, but still.
Unfortunately, having access to information isn’t the same as actually knowing things but a lot of people sure think it’s the same
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The ability to just... f**k off.
You can still do it by leaving your phone at home for the day or whatever, but it's not really socially acceptable. If someone wants to get ahold of you, you'll come home to piles of calls and voicemails as the people on the other end assume you're dead.
In the 90s, it wasn't just socially acceptable to "disappear" for a day, it was assumed that's how things would work. If someone couldn't get ahold of you, they just shrugged and dealt with it. If you went out shopping or something, you got home when you got home and that was that.
Even disregarding how difficult it is for people to willing "switch off" from digital engagement (which is a huge problem in its own right) the shift from people assuming you're unavailable and feeling lucky if they managed to connect, to assuming you're available and being offended or worried if they can't connect, is a truly massive shift in how humans interact with each other.
The other side was that if some real emergency happened, you would call and call and call the landline every 5 minutes, hoping the person had arrived home. I'm so old that voice messages weren't a thing. Or the "fun" of finding out where the person was you were supposed to meet. Are they 30 minutes late because something came up at work, or are they in the ICU and you are standing in front of their house in December? ( I was the one in the ICU ).
Calling to get the precise time when you were setting a clock.
“At the tone, the time will be…”.
I now feel badly for not simply being honest, but I would give the number of time and temperature info in another city if I wasn't interested in dating someone who showed interest in me.
Encyclopedias to do homework.
Going to your neighbors' house because you got locked out.
"Be in this house when the streetlights come on!".
Having to wait until 7pm for free calling minutes.
A sort of freedom that is hard to explain. Even if you get rid of your smartphone now, society has a different view of that and you will be blamed for your desition. Also there was a focus on creating that was bigger.
Society is definitely making sure that you can't exist without a smartphone: You can't buy a bus ticket without one anymore, you can't get a discount at the store unless you get their app, you can't see the menu at a restaurant unless you scan their QR code... It's just illogical and very problematic to make people's entire lives rely on one single thing that might get lost or stolen or stop working out of the blue.
When you were hiking on your own, it was just you and the world. It couldn't reach you - and if you had some thought or some question coming up, well, you had to memorise it, write it down, or let go. Most of the time you would just let go. In those times life had a different rhythm.
Personally, I like that I can do virtually anything I need to do with my phone. Any and all bill paying, banking, etc. Before I retired I dreaded having to open up the computer to do banking, etc. But with my phone I can do it all right there. It's a pain at times but what isn't?
Getting yelled out for calling someone’s home and getting their sibling or parent for bad phone etiquette.
“May I please speak with”….
I had friends who would call too late. My stepdad and mom would chew me out.😞
Predicting the future. Before smartphones if you were at your computer, you knew someone was gonna call sou before the phone rang. Im not gonna say how. If you know, you know.
Playing in the creek catching crawdads.
We had a golf course just down the road (not a country club, think redneck golfer and you've got the idea) and we'd walk through the creek collecting golf balls.
When I was a kid, parents did not know where their child is, just that they are "out". That was normal, at least in my hometown.
Rule in my family was, I had to be home by the time the streetlights are turned on.
A busy signal.
Playing outside in the roads. I remember being outside most of the day and even at night just running around with friends playing games and football. It is kinda a cultural shock for me nowadays to see kids playing outside.
I was looking at the house I grew up in on Google maps just yesterday. I looked at the street and thought back to the baseball games we used to play in the road. The sewer cover was in front of our house and the house across the street, they were 1st and 3rd bases. The concrete joint between them was the pitchers mound, home was the joints at the end of our driveway and 2nd base was the joints in front of the neighbors house. We rarely were interrupted by cars as there just weren't many of them at the time. We played a lot of hours of baseball out there right in front of the house.
I'm sure most of these have already been mentioned...but being forced to have face to face interaction, playing outside, having to come up with your own ways to k**l time, being able to do something without it being recorded, having a follower count not influence who wants to be your friend.
The satisfaction of slamming the phone down when hanging up on someone!
Crank calls
Looking up numbers in phone books and facts in encyclopedias.
Talking on the phone for hours. Now we text as a warning or permission to call.
Knowing a plethora of phone numbers by memory.
I never thought text before calling would ever affect me. Never say never. I still find it weird.
“Thank you for calling movie phone”.
The telephone ☎️ on a special table in the hall..
The only one in the entire house..and a small timer ⏳ to ensure you didn't run up a big bill. Sometimes the dial was locked so only incoming calls.Or was that just in my house 😆.
I remember the rotary dial lock. My friend had it on the phone in his basement. I read up on how phones worked, and figured out that you could just tap the hook switch for each number to dial out. Tap it 5 times for a five, pause, tap it six times for a six, etc. Made dialing a bit of a chore, but we were able to dial out on my friend's basement phone. Well, until his dad caught him doing it. My friend threw me under the bus. So I was a "bad influence" and wasn't allowed over there anymore.
Party lines.
Being so broke that you can’t even afford a single phone call.
I bought the absolutely cheapest phone I could find. Then I removed the plug and put alligator clips on it. Carried it everywhere. You could walk up to a pay phone, and remove the cover where the wires attached. Then hook the alligator clips to the termination blocks and make a call. No money required.
Printing out directions to go somewhere.
Not having people in other, potentially hostile, countries manipulating the gullible on social media.
No fkwits spreading ridiculous anti-vaccination bullcr*p. Having a couple of actual friends. Getting all your ''girl problems info'' from Dolly and Girlfriend magazines. Spending hours at Video Ezy picking out your ''Ten movies for ten days for ten dollars''.
While I miss having privacy and all the fun stuff before smart phones took over, there were other things that were worse: gay kids got beat up after school, anyone different got bullied, boys got to play shirts vs skins while girls were told stands on the side and cheer. Kids with different skin colors for in trouble for playing together. Let's not romanticize the past.
I was born in 1954. Life is so different now. Not all good. Not all bad. But changing so fast lately I have trouble keeping up.
You only have 2 years on me and I agree wholeheartedly.
Load More Replies...There are a lot of things that I enjoy about technology. Having an e-reader, I once had to repack my suitcases at the airport because they were too heavy from all my books). Having GPS is great. I know how to get to places using a map but navigating an unfamiliar city is SO much easier now. I love having all music on spotify, my taste varies and I change playlists a lot. I don't like to listen to the same artist for ages and CDs were so expensive. Hated vinyl with a passion. Do people even realize that you can put phones on mute and no one forces you to use social media?
Completely agree. I have no problem being unreachable and feel zero obligation to social media. I do love me some vinyl though, but that's a whole other conversation 😊
Load More Replies...Not having people in other, potentially hostile, countries manipulating the gullible on social media.
No fkwits spreading ridiculous anti-vaccination bullcr*p. Having a couple of actual friends. Getting all your ''girl problems info'' from Dolly and Girlfriend magazines. Spending hours at Video Ezy picking out your ''Ten movies for ten days for ten dollars''.
While I miss having privacy and all the fun stuff before smart phones took over, there were other things that were worse: gay kids got beat up after school, anyone different got bullied, boys got to play shirts vs skins while girls were told stands on the side and cheer. Kids with different skin colors for in trouble for playing together. Let's not romanticize the past.
I was born in 1954. Life is so different now. Not all good. Not all bad. But changing so fast lately I have trouble keeping up.
You only have 2 years on me and I agree wholeheartedly.
Load More Replies...There are a lot of things that I enjoy about technology. Having an e-reader, I once had to repack my suitcases at the airport because they were too heavy from all my books). Having GPS is great. I know how to get to places using a map but navigating an unfamiliar city is SO much easier now. I love having all music on spotify, my taste varies and I change playlists a lot. I don't like to listen to the same artist for ages and CDs were so expensive. Hated vinyl with a passion. Do people even realize that you can put phones on mute and no one forces you to use social media?
Completely agree. I have no problem being unreachable and feel zero obligation to social media. I do love me some vinyl though, but that's a whole other conversation 😊
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