"When everything else has gone from my brain ... what will be left, I believe, is topology: the dreaming memory of land as it lay this way and that." Annie Dillard
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Monday, November 7, 2011
Timepiece
Full disclosure here: My daughter Claire suggested this post. I emailed her Saturday night to remind her to "fall back." She's a busy college student; I thought she might forget.
Here's what she wrote back: "I think all my clocks turned themselves back. You should blog about that. Now clocks turn themselves back. Computers, phones, you know."
She's onto something, I think. Not just that the ritual of "falling back," that satisfying stoppage of time, is more often accomplished by a distant satellite these days. But also about the digital divide. Look at the wrists of young people; you won't see many watches. I wonder, too, how many clocks they're buying. My guess is precious few. When time is always in the palm of your hand, why display it on a wall?
The very concept of a timepiece, of a device whose only purpose is to tell time, is going the way of the slide rule. As a watch-wearer, cuckoo-clock owner and occasional Luddite, I find something to lament about that.