Write, Erase, Repeat.

Since my recent post about my new Kindle, I have been thinking  a lot about technology.


On Saturday night the kids and I had a chew-and-view.  We ate tortellini and watched Shrek the Third, renting the movie on my laptop from amazon instant play and having it transmitted to the TV.  Who needs Netflix?  I don't even need to wait for a DVD to come in the mail any more.  Later that evening, having enjoyed a delicious (and very silly) twitter conversation earlier in the day about a modern-day reworking of A Christmas Carol, I downloaded the book on to my Kindle for free and read half of it there and then before I went to bed.  While I read I listened to some old Ella Fitzgerald albums that I used to own in college but were lost years ago in one of the many moves that I've undertaken since then… that no longer matters, though, as they're all available for limitless streaming on Spotify.


All pretty cool.  But.


(I know.  You all saw that "but" coming a mile off.)


There is something slightly oppressive about the fact that I am apparently unable to step out of the door in the morning without several hundred dollars of electrical hardware in my pockets.  It is sad the decision to leave my phone in the office when I go out to lunch is an event worthy of a tweet (and several congratulatory tweets back.)  My calendars lie, in fully-synced harmony, on my phone and my laptop.  I can never escape them.  I'm electronically tethered as effectively as any criminal out on day-release.


Well, enough, as they say, is enough.  In my new kitchen, we have decided to go old school.  I bought a white board and a bunch of colored pens.  And we write whatever needs to be written on it.  Here's a photo of it I took a week or so ago.


whiteboard


So that would be:



Ideas for future blog posts (including, I notice, this one)
Shopping list (complete with inept illustrations)
Ideas for Christmas presents
Odd little exchange with son (bottom left)
Daughter's unsolicited opinion about this weird new medium (bottom right)

I think it's fair to say that Catherine speaks for us all about the whiteboard.  We all love it and use it.  In addition to being a genuinely useful tool – and heaven knows how many yellow stickies it has saved us from – it's a communal forum, an outlet for our creative urges and silliness.  We can scribble whatever nonsense comes into our heads and draw pictures and anything else that takes our fancy.  The children like to insult each other on it in a way that makes it very difficult to be cross with them about it.  And the beauty of it all is that it can all be wiped clean with a few swift strokes of the eraser.


And, in this world of tapping at tiny screens, there is something pleasingly primal about both the act of writing on a whiteboard with a brightly-colored pen and then erasing those same words – it's a physical, visceral sensation, all the more pleasurable for being completely self-sufficient.  Not to brag or anything, but our whiteboard works during a power cut.  We never have to call the helpline. I don't worry about when the warranty will expire.  Best of all, even a child can use it.


whiteboard2




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Published on December 21, 2011 07:31
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