Perverse Future


By skinner_jennifer
- 2839 reads
Dear diary...
How I long for breathing space,
Evoking past is all it takes
To fulfill measure of time...
Hiding doubts reflected in
Disenchantment from
Personal negative world –
Living inside technological
Addiction, both taxing and
Distressing, ever changing,
Not allowed to catch my
Breathing.
Taunting me to join the swarm,
Afraid of being left behind;
Anguish at loss of independence,
Inconsistent – hard for me to
Understand.
Once full of confidence, now
Dense fog clouds my brain with
So much information; bewildered
By forced future where instability
Causes Anxiety.
Forewarning of global tragedy;
Artificial Intelligence uprising,
Revolutionary rebellion fighting;
Honest integrity threatened...
Disenchanted. Senses insulted by
Perverse information gathered.
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Comments
It is so difficult to know
It is so difficult to know what to read, and what to trust. And then there will always be gloom-forceasters, but we know this world is uncertain. The only hope it to put one's trust in the One who not only sees, but has his hand on the messes, and can promise to take us through, and only allow so much before he comes to separate and bring evil to a close. Rhiannon
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You've really captured both
You've really captured both the frantic scrabbling and the exhaustion that characterises so much of what's around us now. I can't remember the exact details, but I think our brains have evolved to deal with only a certain amount of information (be that information correct or incorrect) and we are, as you say, bewildered by so much of what we see and hear. I take comfort, though, from the fact that young people do seem to sense things are not as they should be, and some of them at least are turning away from the immersion in all things tech. Perhaps there's hope!
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Disenchantment
I see where you're coming from Jenny. I feel exactly the same. It depresses me to think about the state of the world today. Sometimes I tell myself to close my eyes to it but that's what people did in Europe in the 1930s with horrific consequences. I don't know which way to turn.
Turlough
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Sympathise with you so much!
Sympathise with you so much! "Senses insulted by / Perverse information gathered." is a fabulous way to put it. The other day, my son wondered how people will learn empathy in the future, when so much of their knowledge will come from AI. Perhaps it is BETTER to be left behind, rather than be hurried along to these "virtual" worlds? Make our own little patch as good for Nature as we can, our feet on the real ground, our eyes to the real sky. Thank you for expressing so poetically something I feel strongly, you who are richest in empathy :0)
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Jenny, I think you are a bit
Jenny, I think you are a bit older than me, so I consider you to be very brave to take up the challenge of a phone! I do not have one as my hands shake too much, also I cannot hear phones very well. BUT I can do email! Emails are REALLY EASY because you can do them on a laptop or computer :0) PLEASE ask your partner about showing you how to use Outlook or Gmail? There might be other ones but those are what i know. It doesn't work if I am out, of course. That is still scary. But at home I can email my son's phone, or his Dad's. Or anyone I need. And they can email me. Don't need texting or all that faff :0)
Also, I think there are still really simple phones (as in not "smart" or "android" ) but still mobile, (I had one but I could not hear it). If you write down the list of instructions to do, and keep it with the phone, along with the numbers of your most important people, and try calling them once a day you might find you can do that, too? I admire you very much for having held down a full time job, being a single Mum, owning and driving a car. You CAN do this :0) Just take your time
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A real cri de coeur -
A real cri de coeur - straight from the heart. Did you know someone's given it a name now? 'The overwhelm'. Turlough's right, and we mustn't look away, but perhaps we should try to look a little bit at a time - small steps. This little patch of the internet is hopefully a peaceful place for you in between. Well deserved cherries!
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Jenny, just do little bits
Jenny, just do little bits and practise each thing over and over. The more you do, the easier it will get. Think of texts as being more like a quick message on a post it note than a letter. You'll get it soon enough and then you'll feel like wonder woman!
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This is so well put. The way
This is so well put. The way the world, or various versions of it, flood in through our phones or whatever devices we use can't be right. The speed of it all too. Quiet spaces feel more important than ever. Thanks for posting.
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An inciteful summing up of
An inciteful summing up of the current mood. It's impossible to imagine the future and difficult to plan for anything. The media constantly throwing threats at us, gloom and doom but how much of it is real? For sure our economy needs a huge shake up. I've said it before, at least we have nature, those of us lucky enough to access green spaces. Nature is our sanctuary.
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Congratulations! This is Poem
Congratulations! This is Poem of the Week!
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AI is a worry, among others.
AI is a worry, among others. Poetry may be the answer.
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Congratulations!
Well-deserved accolades! I totally related to these words, Jennifer. I resisted getting a mobile phone - came very late to the lessons, My daughter became very ill and I need to be available for her and her family so eventually got one. I was a whizz on the computer, not scared of it at all but that phone... even now, years later I still do not have the confidence I have with my desktop. (I still need my grandaughter to sort stuff out on my new one.)
Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/search?q=FrancesMF
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AI uprising?!
"Forewarning of global tragedy; Artificial Intelligence uprising"
it probably is not a bad thing after all, really just the name i don't like, electronics works completely differently to our human animal bio-electrical neural chemistry, it is something completely different, but is it really new, at all?
It will take us some time to adapt to all these new developments in electronics, you know the legal and social and all those areas there will be a bit of chaos for a while.
Good Jenny for letting us, think!! Tom
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You've captured my own
You've captured my own feelings in this. We now have instant access to all the information we could ever need... but we seem no better-informed. Plenty misinformed, mind. I don't and never will have a smartphone, but already I'm finding the creeping coercion is locking me out of things: car parks, work intranet, QR codes, even an event I went to where entry was by phone. Crazy world. Well done on distilling the frustration.
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Strangely, since I retired...
Strangely, since I retired... I've returned to the library! Like you, I hadn't been in our one for year and always bought what books I wanted. But now I've get less money - and more time to read! So I popped in on Saturday to update my details. And before I left, the librarian offered me a leaflet about additional services. I looked at it later... and it was all about e-books, e-learning, apps to download. So I recycled it! I would benefit from using a e-reader because I have contact dermatitis which is usually triggered by glossy magazines or glossy book covers (something in the gloss!) But I prefer to have a book in my hands - so I wear gloves instead! I love books - the physical objects, the pages, the ability to underline, mark pages, skip back and forth. For me, an e-reader would be just another screen to look at.
This dependence on the tech has, of course, created an Achille's Heel for us. I even see sober and sensible journalists saying they are stockpiling a few bits in case of a cyber attack. We saw what it did to M&S and the Co-op recently. Now, today, the chap in Aldi said to me that they're having supply chain issues for some staples because of cyber interference. The other thing is... a smart phone is a wonderful tool for enacting social control. I don't think it's conspiracy theorising at all to think that we lay ourselves wide open to all kinds of trouble the more dependent we become on these devices. I'm currently in a spat with my local council, about to take them to the ombudsman, for making many of the local car parks 'phone pay' only. It's that creeping coercion again - the assumption that we've all got one and have the ability to use it. And those that don't - well, they're in so small a minority, they don't matter. Well... I'm a very loud and vocal minority! And I won't back down on discrimination wherever I encounter it, and in whatever form.
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