Sunday, January 21, 2018

Halt and Catch Fire



While I admit to loving serendipity, I do not have the same affection for being blind-sided. Therefore, I have developed the life-long habit of looking up and out, ever vigilant and attentive to the random details that have potential to come together as a force beyond my control. 

But real life is often full of surprises and therefore it’s a given that one simply cannot be prepared for every contingency. All that is to preface a story I am compelled to share.

Hubs and I recently completed our binge watch of a four season Tee Vee show re-aired on Netflicks - Halt and Catch Fire. A period piece carved out of a ten year period from 1983 to 1993 when personal computers went from ‘what is the point?’ to the life-altering emergence of the World Wide Web.

Both timeframe and storyline were totally relatable to us because we were so there. Full disclosure, Hubs was there first, always the visionary, he pulled me in not exactly kicking and screaming, but not entirely both feet in either. He bought his first Mac in 1984 and my first Mac, a redesigned Lisa, 128k, in 1988.  

We are nothing if not cutting edge.

The point of this ramble is not a review of the show, but an airing of what happened to me as my husband and I were re-immersed into that particular decade of our life story.

I was blind-sided. Days later, I’m still sorting my way out of it.

First of all, allow me to grumble that resorting to the label ‘period piece’ conjures up a reference to antiquity, the early American pioneers taming the wild west or the French Revolution. It’s something of a bitter pill to realize one is now old enough to be able to apply the term to one’s own personal middle-aged adult experience. 

Secondly, the essence of the show - not merely the unfolding of how digital technology, first played with like Legos in the hands of young, impetuous, dreamer/ visionaries - exposed the essence of how I have always had to do things. Seat of my pants, dive in to the middle and work my way out to both ends, now known in modern vernacular as fake it to make it. Until the last three episodes of season four, I could not decide whether I was being forced to relive my enormous failings or celebrate that I tried at all.

And there’s the crux of it - hindsight is indeed 20/20 but it’s also an opportunity to review all the good and bad, the many starts and restarts, the energy expended, the investment in spite of all the unknowns looming that ultimately resolved themselves in success or failure, either of which turns out to be much less significant than we are supposed to believe. 

We live in the moment in a constant state of ‘what ifs’ and that’s because, in the moment, we can’t trust ourselves to pick our options rightly. Only in hindsight can we see that we did choose wrongly sometimes but here we are - in the now, and it’s okay.

There’s an old saying - Everything turns out in the end. If it hasn’t turned out yet, it’s not the end.

Whew. I can move on now. 

For Him,

Meema

4 comments:

  1. I always appreciate your accounts of mental processing. So helpful to this chronic over-thinker.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. All good writers are over thinkers. So, you are in like Flynn! Did I just say that?

      Delete
  2. Speaking about a 'period piece' - at the grocery store during a not-so-busy time of day, two young cashiers were discussing the President Kennedy era. I commented that I remember them. One said to me, "you don't look that old." I am sure he meant it as a compliment, however, I instantly felt every one of my years and then some. :D

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Today, now that I am homeschooling my 12 year old grandson, after discussing a chapter in the book he is reading Code Talker by Joseph Bruchac, he asked why was everyone so scared by the attack on Pearl Harbor since it was so far away. I told him that even though Hawaii was not yet a state, it was still a territory and the attack was on our Naval Base, which was literally an attack on us. This was not something Americans of that era were used to. Even during WW1 the fight did not touch our soil.

      I told him about my mother’s reaction when she heard the news about Pearl Harbor. Then I told him about my reaction to JFK’s assassination. I was dressed in a ball gown having my picture made for the year book with the other actors in my drama group. We were about to debut the play Anastasia. The photo that ended up in the year book was taken the moment the office switched on the intercom with no warning. The announcer was screaming that the president had been shot. Frozen in time in an aging school book - my dumbfounded expression. I also told him how I took the news about 911.

      It occurred to me that there are now teachers who were but babes when the World Trade Center came down. They can only teach the history from book knowledge, not personal experience. That sobering thought makes me feel quite old. :-)

      Delete