The BASIC and Fortran Blues

We were too poor to have a computer when I was a kid. That’s not a metaphor or a badge—just a fact. Computers existed, sure, but they lived in schools and offices, not houses like mine.

I worked on them every day at school. Enough to know how they functioned. Enough to understand their value. But owning one? That felt like something other people did. People with different lives.

Years later, I was married, had kids, and was building computers for work. Irony doesn’t even cover it. I could assemble them, troubleshoot them, keep entire systems running—but still didn’t believe one would ever belong to me. Computers were tools for labor, not things you brought home.

The bosses had computers at home. That should tell you everything. One of them eventually sold me his old machine. Not out of charity—just convenience. It was a laptop, technically, though nothing like the ones we see today. It was big. Heavy. Awkward. The kind of machine that demanded a table and your full attention.

You didn’t just turn it on. You fed it. A boot disk first. Then another disk for the operating system. It made noise. Took time. Let you know it was working. And every time my wife walked past it, the floor shook just enough to make her nervous.

I remember spending hours and hours learning code. All the mistakes. All the half-baked ideas. Late-night phone calls that started with, “I think I’ve got it figured out.” Disk swapped the next day to see if I was right. Composition notebooks filled with lines of code in different languages, written by hand because that’s how you kept track of what worked and what didn’t.

Back then, you needed to know as many languages as possible. Different operating systems for different functions. No universal solution. No safety net. You adapted or you stalled out. The machine didn’t care how tired you were or how close you thought you were—it only cared whether you got it right.

That computer didn’t symbolize progress. It symbolized disbelief. The idea that this thing—once distant, untouchable—was now sitting in my house still felt unreal. Like it might disappear if I got too comfortable.

Now I sit here with multiple machines at my disposal, each faster, lighter, quieter than anything I could’ve imagined back then. I move between them without thinking. Open files. Sync work. Switch tasks like it’s nothing.

But I do my best to remember where that ease came from.

I remember the weight. The disks. The waiting. The way one wrong move could bring everything to a halt. I remember learning patience because there was no other option. Learning respect—for the tool, for the process, for the work itself.

I’ve come so far over the years. But I carry those early lessons with me. Not as nostalgia, and not as hardship for its own sake—but as a reminder.

The tools may change.
The discipline doesn’t.

Daily writing prompt
Write about your first computer.

Living Both Lives 

Daily writing prompt
Your life without a computer: what does it look like?

Coffee, Miles Davis, and a fresh OS 

On the surface, it sounds simple. Life without a computer? Quiet. Peaceful. No antivirus sales pop-ups, no Cialis spam at cost, no desperate emails from Classmates.com trying to drag me back to people I don’t remember—or worse, the ones I do. Strip all that away and sure, it’s tempting to picture myself sitting in an easy chair, no screen glow, no endless buzz. But simple answers are just window dressing. Let’s peel back the glass and see what’s really inside. 

I can remember the feel of it—life before all this. Index cards. Library catalogs. Encyclopedias stacked like walls around a curious kid. I’d curl up in the corner of a room and lose myself in some unknown world waiting to be discovered. A flashlight, a Conan paperback, an aunt who kept my trunk stocked. My mother would walk the hall, check to see if I was asleep. I’d roll to the side, play-acting. She never called me on it. Years later, I returned the favor when my daughters pulled the same trick with Goosebumps and The Babysitters Club. Memory does this thing—it polishes the edges. We remember the warmth, not the splinters. Maybe that’s why fragments from the past glow brighter: because we need them to. 

But nostalgia only tells half the story. You want the other half? Without computers, the scaffolding of modern life buckles. The power grid falters, the fridge sweats, the meds spoil, the pumps stall. Life unravels fast. You don’t have to be a doomsday prepper to see it—the dependency is baked in. 

And then there’s the smaller erosion, the social kind. I asked two young men for directions not long ago. One was polite, helpful. The other? Rude enough to make me want to crush him into wine. Back in the day, you blamed the parents and moved on. Now everyone blames “the cell phone generation”—usually while scrolling their own feeds or taking selfies. Computers didn’t invent rudeness. They just gave it more stages. 

So no, this isn’t an indictment. Computers didn’t ruin us. The cracks were already there long before the first home PC blinked awake. What computers did was speed it all up. Made connection instant, exposure constant. They’ve fed my family, carried my work, given me conversations with people in corners of the world I never would’ve reached otherwise. And they’ve pissed me off. As I type this, I’m smiling through the irony—I’m literally writing about life without computers while debugging a Linux distro on my desktop. It’s a love-hate relationship, and it always will be. 

Music is my counterweight. Computers speed me up, music slows me down. The screen demands reaction; the record demands attention. Drop Zeppelin or Miles Davis and suddenly the world exhales. The horns breathe, the guitars stretch, and I remember that time doesn’t have to move at the pace of a notification. 

So excuse me, as I sit down with my coffee, open a notebook, and let Miles play. I’ll scribble lines of prose that might become something later. And when I’m ready, I’ll boot the machine back up—fresh OS humming—ready to write, to read, to connect with friends across the world. 

Life without a computer? Maybe I’ve been living both lives all along.