Skip to main content

Lo-Tec Lent


Now I'm the sort of person who fulminates because some people are advertising Christmas events and it isn't even Halloween yet, but let me go one step further and suggest something for Lent. I've tried it out on a few others and it has frightened the life out of them, but it was borne out of listening to late night radio last night and some of my experiences over the summer of technology going bad and leaving me feeling decidedly uneasy about my dependence upon it.

So here it is: A Lo-Tec Lent. 40 days without digital technology.
No computers.
No mobiles.
No digital TV.
No internet.
No PDA.
No Satnav.
No pagers.
No DECT phones.
No ipod/mp3 player
No digital radio
No flights

If particularly daring one could add to that no cars with electronic management systems, no dishwashers, no electronic keyboards etc.

I propose it for Lent because it will probably take from now to then to sort out how I might manage without these electronic aids to existence. And the question is... would it be appropriate to manually write up a "blog" about the experience for someone else to post, or would that be defeating the object?
Any takers for this experiment into sacrificial simplicity?

Comments

ScatterCode said…
For me:

No computers.
No mobiles.
Need these for work - could maybe manage no non-work-related texts.

No digital TV.
Don't have a TV, so no problem.

No internet.
Need it for work, otherwise... maybe.

No PDA.
No Satnav.
No pagers.
No DECT phones.
Don't know what a DECT phone is, but don't own any of the others, so no problem.

No ipod/mp3 player
Probably could manage this (assume that playing them via the computer is out as well).

No digital radio
Don't have this.

No flights
Probably fine - not a big traveller.

Would definitely be interesting to follow a blog on this - I blogged on the Carbon Fast last year and people were interested...
Anonymous said…
phew!

I'll think about it.
Anonymous said…
Contemplating...

[curls up into fetal position]
Prepared to negotiate on level of participation... Want this to be aspirational and inspirational rather than some kind of Luddite hi-tec hairshirt experience.
Ironically might have a shared blogspace manned by someone not taking part where we could sign up, and temporarily signpost our own blogs/emails to... and submit our experiences periodically via paper and realmail.
Gary said…
I definitely couldn't do this - but the question of blogging through it could be resolved easily - you talked about the 40 days of Lent - the Sundays are not counted as part of Lent, so you could blog each Sunday on your week's progress.
Considered the old "Sunday's not included" get out of jail free card, but decided that was a complete crock! If I can't manage the 40 days (and I'm not convinced I can) then 6 days at a time is pathetic... And it might make what is already a hectic day, even less of a day of rest if I am blogging like crazy every Sunday in Lent.
Keep spreading the idea, see if we can get any kind of momentum on it...

Popular posts from this blog

A Woman of no Distinction

Don't often post other people's stuff here... But I found this so powerful that I thought I should. It's a performance poem based on John 4: 4-30, and I have attached the original YouTube video below. A word for women, and men, everywhere... "to be known is to be loved, and to be loved is to be known." I am a woman of no distinction of little importance. I am a women of no reputation save that which is bad. You whisper as I pass by and cast judgmental glances, Though you don’t really take the time to look at me, Or even get to know me. For to be known is to be loved, And to be loved is to be known. Otherwise what’s the point in doing either one of them in the first place? I WANT TO BE KNOWN. I want someone to look at my face And not just see two eyes, a nose, a mouth and two ears; But to see all that I am, and could be all my hopes, loves and fears. But that’s too much to hope for, to wish for, or pray for So I don’t, not anymore. Now I keep to myself And by that ...

Psalm for Harvest Sunday

A short responsive psalm for us as a call to worship on Harvest Thanksgiving Sunday, and given that it was pouring with rain as I headed into church this morning the first line is an important remembrance that the rain we moan about is an important component of the fruitfulness of the land we live in: You tend the land and water it And the earth produces its abundance. You crown each year with your bounty, and our storehouses overflow with your goodness. The mountain meadows are covered with flocks and the valleys are filled with corn; Your people celebrate your boundless grace They shout for joy and sing. from Psalm 65

Living under the Empire... (2) Where is Babylon?

We were driving back from school last week, talking about books that we had been reading and my younger son, Ciaran, asked me "Where is Babylon?" I have to confess that my history is better than my geography, and I said that it no longer exists as an inhabited city, but its ruins were to the north west of the current capital of Iraq, Baghdad. When I checked however, I discovered that it is actually about 50 miles south of Baghdad and the modern town is the administrative centre of the province of Babil... But just as the modern city is but a shadow of the historic capital of 2 ancient empires, first under Hammurabi in the 18th century BCE and then the "Neo-Babylonian" empire (under Nebuchadnezzar etc) in the 6th century BCE, so the earthly Babylonian empire/s was/were fleeting in comparison to the enduring metaphorical idea of Babylon. The original Empire under Hammurabi was probably the ultimate origin of some of the early Biblical stories, including the ...