I could do a post about the past year. I won't. Personally, it was fine, but domestically and internationally it was a mess.
I did some stuff. I didn't do other stuff. I need to make a list of things to do soon to get the New Year started right. Update my Will, arrange for a full physical exam, get the 2005 Toyota Highlander in for serious maintenance (I hate all the too-fancy stuff on the new cars).
I need to build a small medicine chest for Iza. I need to completely rearrange the basement (too much stuff, poorly organized). I need to stop smoking. I DON'T need an exercise or diet change (other than smoking, I am disgustingly healthy).
I MAY decide to buy a smart phone. I'm not sure exactly why. I suppose I'm missing out on "something". I plan to upgrade digitally in some ways. Activate Siri on the computer maybe. Turn on the HDTV voice command. See what Amazon streaming service has to offer (as a Prime member, I'm paying for it). I'm WAY behind the tech curve and I keep reading about stuff I COULD do.
Or maybe not. I'm pretty unhackable as things stand. I can't even find myself on the net other than a few address errors of former residences. Only the computer is online, and I have a backup system that stays offline until I plug it briefly.
I suppose my 2 blogs are hackable, but they aren't on my computer, so I can't do much about that!
The funny thing is that I was "the techie" in my office. Fortunately, I was able to retire just as things got beyond my knowledge.
When Dad lived with me in 2012-2014, I showed him "the internet". He was amazed, but didn't have the slightest idea what he was really seeing. And it wasn't just his age and declining mental abilities. He simply had left his own tech world behind when he retired in 1979. So that is food for thought. Do I want to try to catch up or do I want to let it go? And maybe finding myself in a world I can't quite understand anymore in a few more years?
It takes work to keep up with tech. I find myself struggling with some aspects. Should I have a "doorbell camera"? Should my refrigerator know what I've run out of? Do I need a computer program to tell me about pills and doctor appointments? And whatever happened to voice-typing? I might really need that someday, and better to get used to it now than when I am too stupid someday. What about painless-death options?
Some people make New Year's Resolutions. I'm pondering a decade or so of my future... And this is a good time to consider all these things.
1 comment:
New will: Mark, I think that if you spell my name for a bequest as "Megan, Sydney Australia" they will be able to track me down! (JOKE!!!)
Tech: yep, I can relate. I'm a late adopter, but I do adopt some things, just not every single thing. I tell myself that I don't really know how a car works or a landline telephone but I'm a competent user of both, so it's okay for me to adopt a similar approach as new technology rolls around: don't need to become an expert and understand it all - just need to know enough to know whether its functionality is of interest to me and, if it is, then how to achieve competency.
Megan
Sydney, Australia
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