Mom Goes On The Line
Author:
Felice Prager
I received three e-mails from my mother today. This is
unusual because until today, my mother didn't own a computer.
She's watched me work on my assorted computers that occupy my
office and my kids' bedrooms. For us, computers are a way of
life. For my mother, computers have been frightening machines
that collect way too much dust.
The first e-mail from my mother said, "Believe it or
not---I'm on the line. It took a long time. Call you later.
Mom." I figured by "on the line" she meant "online" and laughed
at her interpretation. As a little girl, I remember my mother
putting someone on hold by saying, "hold the line." Then again,
to my mother, there was a phone line, a clothes line, and A-line
dresses. "Online" was never a concept she learned. "Online" just
happened.
"Welcome to the club", I replied in my e-mail. "Have fun
exploring."
The second e-mail came several hours later. It said,
"I'm just learning, so don1t mind the mistakes. I bought a Dell
like you suggested. Eventually I!ll know what I!m doing. gIVE mE
A lITTLE tIME. Love you- Mom."
This was all written in the
subject line of the email. The body of the email was empty.
With a little interpretation, I saw what my mother did. So used
to typing on a Smith Corona keyboard, she let her fingers decide
which keys to press instead of looking at the keyboard to see
the computerized differences.
I didn't want to burst my mother's bubble and tell her
that she might never know what she's doing on a computer. So I
sent her a reply explaining that the apostrophe and quotation
marks are not over the 1 and 8 anymore like they used to be on
her old Smith Corona typewriters. I explained where they were
and a few other intricacies of the newer keyboard. Then I told
her that the message didn't belong in the subject line. I told
her where to put it. I told her to have fun and explore this new
cyber-world. I told her about bookmarking favorite places, using
a virus scanner, avoiding pornography, and other simple things.
I worried that I was putting too
much into an e-mail, but then again, I had wished I knew
someone when I started out using mine who could walk me through
the tough stuff. I told her I hoped the beginning is interesting
and relatively easy for her. I told her not to be afraid. I told
her that unless she messed around and tried to upgrade the
inside of her computer like I do, she'd be fine. I don't think
she'll try to see what's inside the box. And if she does, which
I doubt she would because now, unlike in my early days "on the
line," I can fix it.
I also sent her a second email with some links to some of
my published work online, things she has never read because she
could not access them without a computer. My mother has seen
most of my print publications; until now she has missed
everything on the Internet.
When I was in elementary school, my mother was one of the
few moms who worked outside the home. In the late fifties and
early sixties, other mothers stayed home. Mine worked because
she had no choice. Life sometimes forces us to make those
decisions. Some mothers made cookies; I don't have any memories
of my mother baking. Instead, my mother typed my school reports
for me. In my case, the situation was ideal. The office where my
mother worked was across the street from my school. She was
often able to coordinate her lunch with mine, and I was none the
worse for it. I always had a ride to school, and for lunch, we
would visit a local coffee shop and eat grilled cheese
sandwiches together. I'd have my chocolate egg cream; she would
have her black coffee, no sugar.
It was so long ago, but I can still visualize her office
with the modern machines that impressed me so much back then. I
have always liked machines. This probably explains why I love my
computers so much and why my sons had no arguments when it came
to purchasing Nintendo, Super Nintendo, Nintendo 64,
Playstation, Xbox, and the other game machines they have wanted.
The only problem for my sons was getting Mom to stop playing so
they could.
In my youth at my mother's office, I liked trying to
figure out how her machines worked. My mother's office had great
modern machines such as assorted electric typewriters, phones
with five lines, a manual adding machine with a slot
machine-like pull arm, and a Xerox machine that needed pink
paper placed on top of white paper all placed in a hard plastic
sleeve just to make one copy. These copies were always too dark
or too light and looked nothing like the original, but there was
no alternative and I was the only one I knew who could ask her
mother to make copies of things. My mother never said no since
she was in charge of ordering supplies at this office.
I remember when I took typing in high school, a required
course for all academic students going on to college or
secretarial school, and I finally made it to 40 words per
minute; my mother was doing 65 words or more at the time. She
never made mistakes. I tested her once at 80 words and no
errors. She was an incredible typist. In those days, fixing
errors required specialized typewriter erasers that tended to
rip the paper if pressed too hard against the print. Sometimes
it required starting from scratch. In those days, carbon paper
made barely readable copies, and they served the purpose because
if another copy was needed, my mother would type it again. In
those days, my mother typed the addresses, one at a time, on the
letterhead and on the envelopes. Billing clients took several
days. In those days, my mother was the master of her trade. She
typed fast and rarely made an error that she couldn't fix with
ease.
My mother's third e-mail was a reply to the one I had
sent filled with, what I thought, were helpful hints. It was
also written completely in the subject line. "Why did they move
the apostrophe and quotation marks? There was nothing wrong with
where they were. I'm going to write Dell a letter about it. Love
Mom."
Today my mother took a big step. She is on the road to
being computer literate in a world very alien to the one where
she had been a super star. With as much tact as I could muster,
I told my mom where to find the apostrophe and the quotation
marks, and she told me, in an 21st century e-mail, what I could
do with them.
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