26 January 2026

Intimations of Immortality.


               I used to know how to set the points and plugs on an internal combustion engine.  I worked on main frame computers from a dumb terminal.  I used an operator to place a long-distance call.  Every few months I had to chisel the ice out of a refrigerator freezer.  Changed the ribbon on the typewriter, threaded film onto little sprockets, found my way around the country by asking directions at the gas station.

All these life skills are now totally obsolete, along with hundreds of others, as a result of advancing technology.  About which I am not the least bit mournful.  I partly wish I could clear some of that antediluvian junk out of my memory so I can fit in more durable information, though I’m glad I got to do all those things, since they represent interesting threads of experience that help stitch the whole thing together. 

This bolsters my belief that there is no such thing as useless information.  I once edited mind-numbingly dense technical papers for a big hydrocarbon processing company.  I don’t remember a single thing I read, corrected for clarity or reassembled to provide a more convincing argument, but I remember how I felt performing the task.  Tired and drained, but also satisfied with myself for having accomplished something about which I was startlingly unqualified.

There’s a silver lining in having worked through the various phases of technological development.  These tasks leave behind tools and skills that can be repurposed for emerging challenges.  Every time I repair something around the house, I use hacks and work arounds only learnable tearing apart car engines and old radios.  The most satisfying is when I can fix something designed to simply toss out and replace.  I feel like I’m sticking it to the obsolescence man. 

            I have difficulty with the word nostalgia.  I think it’s because of the sentimentality and fruitless yearning nestled in the definition.  While I feel enriched by memories of past experience, I have no desire to return to those moments.  The fact is, you can’t go back again, and I don’t want to.  I just don’t want to forget, distort into oblivion, or disrespect, the memories. 

Aside from the people you love, the experiences you have are the only truly meaningful value in having lived.   If you’re a writer, it’s your toolbox, your chef’s knives, color palette, chromatic scale, source code and cheat sheet.    

            Luckily, most acquired knowledge isn’t as perishable as the technological.  The trouble here is accessing it, especially when the content piles up and gears in the retrieval mechanism wear down.  I use this as an excuse for holding on to mountains of books, a trillion nuts/bolts/screws/thingmajigs/tools/spares (ad finitum), bins of curling photographs and old friends.  Also, I may have the short-term memory of a drunken gnat, but I’m great at dredging up the particulars of a high school keg party or a day wandering around Fiesole looking down on the Cattedrale di Santa Maria del Fiore di Firenze rising up out of the fog.  The sight of Jimi Hendrix lighting his Stratocaster on fire under the blue lights and strobes at the Electric Factory.  Looking behind me and seeing the dinghy we were towing behind a sailboat rise up ten feet above my head.

Since the brain isn't a digital recorder, I’ve come to learn that many of these remembrances are approximate representations of what actually transpired.  They’re more like 8mm movies with the disclaimer, "Based on the experiences of Chris Knopf, as told to whoever was still around to listen.”

But so what.  Once they’ve been fed into the fiction-writing machine, the provenance is of little importance.   

 

3 comments:

  1. One of the most memorable moments (up to that time) in my life: sitting upstairs backstage at the Whisky A Go Go in 1970 or 71, listening to John Mayall downstairs, getting high, while the rain poured down on Sunset Boulevard outside, reflecting all the lights in the street... Who knows how accurate that really is? I don't. But I remember the music and the rain and the lights, and that's enough for me.

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  2. A thoughtful and thought-provoking post, Chris. I'll share three extremely varied thoughts of mine. One, we still have to chisel ice out of the vegetable bin of our persnickety Samsung refrigerator at frequent intervals in between mopping up the floods. It's climate change in our fridge, but only in the vegetable bin. Two, the time saved in using an up-to-date hey-presto computer is now wasted correcting the errors AI adds in the name of "productivity and creativity" (code words that ALWAYS mean AI is going to do something you don't want without asking first). This morning I tried to copy a personal folder I'd called "Colonoscopy 2025-26" from my Desktop to the Cloud. (I'd had to postpone the procedure due to illness last September and haven't succeeded in rescheduling it yet, but the paperwork is still good.) AI helpfully "edited" the folder to call the copy in the Cloud "Colonoscopy 2026." DOWN, Rover! As a writer, I can't say time is money, but it was aggravating to stop what I was doing to rename the folder as originally given. Three, the details that float up from our long-past experiences are indeed the building blocks of our fiction and poetry, for those of us who are also poets. When Yellow Mama recently sent out a call for micro-stories for the Valentine's Day issue, I had a hitherto untapped memory from fifty years ago in Yosemite. You'll be able to read the 299-word story it became in Yellow Mama in mid-February. The title is, "If You Live Long Enough." I'd love to tell you the punch line, but you'll have to read the story. Yellow Mama is always free online, and each issue is up for two months and then archived.

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  3. A friend was taking care of her nieces and nephew during a storm. They were planning to have popcorn when the power went off. They had candles and flashlights, but now no microwave. The kids were devastated they wouldn't have popcorn.

    "No problem," said Auntie. "We have a gas stove." She snipped open the popcorn packets, dumped the contents and oil into a pot, and voilĂ , popcorn! The children were gobsmacked at their aunt's mental warehouse of knowledge.

    Me, I still have antique 'coal oil' lamps of my ancestors that I ignite when the power goes out. Nothing like old-tech when the lights go out.

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