Phil Kaye, “Before the Internet”

It is summertime
In the 90s before the internet
and nine year old me is sitting on the couch with Ben, my best friend, who has a bowl cut
Like I do and I asked Ben what he wants to do and Ben says what he always says:
I don’t know dude, what do you wanna do?
And I don’t know either because it’s already two months in the summertime
and we have done everything we think we can do,
played basketball so many times Ben knows I will never go left
Stayed up until midnight to watch the r-rated VHS tapes my mother owns, pulled each other around in a wagon
Toilet papered every house on the street except for our own
And so we turn on the television and Indiana Jones is playing and afterwards we go outside
Because there is no internet and we stare at the big tree on our Street
the tree that is bigger than Ben’s entire house that we have never been able to climb because we are little kids, but now
We are little kids that just watched Indiana Jones
and so we find some old bungee cords
and the hooks of those bungee cords find themselves into our belt loops and we tie the other side’s around the tree and now we are
Halfway up the tree, that is bigger than Ben’s entire house
and I quietly think to myself: maybe I am Indiana Jones.
and Ben quietly thinks to himself
maybe
This is a bad idea
And my belt loops quietly think to themselves, what the fuck
But we were all thinking quietly
And so for a moment, it is silent and at nine years old I transform into things I have never been before
An astronaut floating in space,
the hummingbird buzzing in place,
a beam of August light floating through the windows
and then I hear a crack which is not Indiana Jones’s whip
but my belt loops snapping apart shrieking relief
and I fall all the way down the tree onto my back
and Ben rushes down and says, are you okay?
and I say,
I think so
and Ben starts to laugh and I start to laugh and I’m bleeding from my elbow, but it’s just a scrape
 And that means that I am human and we are alive here tonight and we sit
 Quietly till my mother comes searching

Can We Auto-Correct Humanity? by Prince Ea

Prince Ea, “Can We Auto-Correct Humanity?”

Did you know the average person spends 4 years of his life looking down at his cell phone?
Kind of ironic, ain’t it?
How these touch screens can make us lose touch
But it’s no wonder in a world filled with iMacs, iPads and iPhones
So many “i”’s, so many selfies, not enough “us”‘s and “we”’s
See, technology has made us more selfish and separate than ever
‘Cause while it claims to connect us, connection has gotten no better
And let me must express first, Mr. Zuckerberg
Not to be rude, but you should re-classify Facebook to what it is: an anti-social network
‘Cause while we may have big friend lists
So many of us are friendless, all alone
‘Cause friendships are more broken than the screens on our very phones
We sit at home on our computers measuring self-worth by numbers of followers and likes
Ignoring those who actually love us
It seems we’d rather write an angry post than talk to someone who might actually hug us
Am I bugging? You tell me
‘Cause I asked a friend the other day, “Let’s meet up face to face.”
They said, “Alright. What time you wanna Skype?”
I responded with “OMG!”, “SRS?”, and then a bunch of “SMH”‘s
And realized, what about me?
Do I not have the patience to have conversation without abbreviation?
This is the generation of media overstimulation
Chats have been reduced to snaps
The news is 140 characters
Videos are 6 seconds at high speed
And you wonder why ADD is on the rise faster than 4G LTE
But, get a load of this
Studies show the attention span of the average adult today
Is one second lower than that of a goldfish
So if you’re one of the few people or aquatic animals that have yet to click off or close this video, congratulations
Let me finish by saying you do have a choice, yes
But this one, my friends, we cannot auto-correct – we must do it ourselves
Take control or be controlled: make a decision
Me?
No longer do I want to spoil a precious moment by recording it with a phone – I’m just gonna keep them
I don’t wanna take a picture of all my meals anymore – I’m just gonna eat them
I don’t want the new app, the new software, or the new update
And if I wanna post an old photo, who says I have to wait until Thursday?
I’m so tired of performing in the pageantry of vanity
And conforming to this accepted form of digital insanity
Call me crazy, but I imagine a world where we smile when we have low batteries
‘Cause that will mean we’ll be one bar closer…to humanity