[what, no hoverboards!? was originally published in Mountain Home Magazine.]
Do I stand alone in my immense disappointment of this post-millennial, pre-anything-too-technologically-advanced age? I mean, twenty years ago—when I was only a boy—the year 2000 was the future. And not just the future like I’m going to save money for the future, future. No, it was—The Future—in holographic neon strobe. For countless (The Jetsons) years, and many (2001: A Space Odyssey) decades before that, the year 2000 was hailed as “::*::*::*::The Future::*::*::*::.” A Space Odyssey? Hardly. A terrorist attack is all we really got that year. But a space odyssey? Humankind—er, America—has touched the moon, what? Once? And I read in the news just the other day that we plan on going back. In 2018. But, I digress. The moon, and astronauts—please! I should be catching the three o’clock bus trip back to the moon, where my family waits in our pressure-stabilized, artificial-gravity-enhanced, feng shui spacepod. I would have just driven myself to work, but I forgot to charge the solar-powered P.S.C. (personal space craft, of course). Okay, so scrap that. I can live without lunar-life. You can keep my spacepod. I get sea-sick and I’m sure space-sickness goes hand-in-hand. And the skeptics or optimists or governments or spin doctors ask, but what about your personal computers, your Internet, your movie-ruining cell phones, your PDA, you iPod (surely, you jest), and your On-star equipped gas-guzzler? Are you not entertained? Are You Not? No, I am not. I am greatly and powerfully unimpressed. Are you telling me that these… these jokes, are my James-Bond-would-give-his-right-arm-for-these-kinds-of-toys technological advances?!? I can now make spreadsheets and Power Points, receive pointless phone calls at any given moment, anywhere, store files on a card in my pocket, listen to lots of music instead of just a single cassette or compact disc, and drive the same fossil-fueled car I’ve always driven! Am I really supposed to be impressed? Thanks for all the fish. I should be sending hologramatic messages-at the Least-to friends on Mars, not text messages to Jimmy who lives next door. I should be flying through a virtual world of an Internet, meeting-greeting-loving-real-real-real-virtual world. It’s just the other world. My music should all be stored in my microscopic, thermal-powered chip (under the skin, but painless) and in sync with my brain waves. Everyone gets their own movie soundtrack. Unless, of course, you want to project your mental will upon the home-audio-receiver (also the size of a molecule) and play your music throughout the spacepod. Spacepod. iPod? A step backwards. And don’t think I’ve forgotten: What happened to robots? A house-keeping-dish-washing-brilliant-ask-me-anything-robot-shiny-metallic-flawless-a-person-of-a-personal-robot. Did they give up on robots? Scientists and programmers and engineers and governments—did they give up on robots? Because I’m still looking forward to my humanoid-robotoid-learning-loving-nurturing-Darwin-was-a-chump robot. But, here we are, post-millennium, light-years behind that eight ball. So, fine, I could live without my robot (although, I am not pleased) and without my brain-sync-chip and virtual-life. Also, I’ll forgo the hologram-messages (h-mail), and my friends can be vacationing in Florida, that’s fine. Keep Mars for the Martians. But, for Godsake, we live in The Future and—
What, no hoverboards?