When I was a kid, I was allotted one hour a day of computer
activity. Oh, you read right: one
hour. Those were the days when school assignments did not require a computer to
be done (oh, what simpler times they were. I actually remember a time before
Google. The computers at school’s default search engine was Ask Geeves. I mean
who the hell is gonna trust a search engine that sounds like it was named after
a butler? Everyone knows it’s always the butler that did it. Who’s gonna trust
a murderer, am I right?). I mostly used that hour to play the Sims (the first
one, I’m that old) and sneak onto MSN Messenger (like Facebook Messenger, but
way cooler. Who remembers the giant annoying buzzing animations?), which was,
when I was in elementary school, forbidden. I never knew the exact reason why
my parents did not want me going on MSN Messenger as a kid, but I assumed that
it was because they thought that’s where the predators were.
My parents are not like most: they both have degrees in
Computer Science, and have pretty much always known more about computers than I
do. Growing up in the beginnings of the Internet Age made my situation
relatively unique amongst my peers; even in high school, most of my friends
were vastly more technologically savvy than their parents. And this was before
the emergence of the smart phone (I knew one person in high school who had an
iPhone; all my friends’ cell phones had real keyboards and were often *gasp*
flip phones).
I truly “discovered” the internet when I got my first
laptop. I bought it at the end of the summer of 2007, after working my very
first job at a reception hall, waiting and cleaning tables for weddings. Some time
after that, I discovered the wonderful world of FanFiction, where I reignited
the love of writing I had developed in Mrs. Krupp’s sixth grade English class.
I mainly wrote fics for Bones and Hannah Montana (if you want to mock me for
the latter, please see my previous post. I’ll wait. Oh, feel silly now, do yah?
Good.), but read fics for pretty much all my favourite fandoms. Then I
discovered YouTube.
ENOUGH BACKSTORY: ON TO THE MR. FEENY-STYLE LESSON!
YouTube was what my Advanced Fiction Workshop professor
would call my “crisis”: the event that breaks the main character(s) away from
their normal lives and starts the story. My teenage years, as explained in my
last post, were a very dark time for me. It was on YouTube, making fan videos
and discussing my favourite shows with complete strangers, that I found my
solace from the darkness of my everyday life. These complete strangers, however,
quickly became my closest friends.
For someone who lives more in “real life” than on the
internet, it’s hard to explain how people from different time zones, countries
or even continents could be considered my friends. It’s not that I didn’t have
friends at school. I had a sufficient amount of school chums. But there was
something very freeing about the virtual world: while these people were flesh
and blood humans somewhere else, I didn’t have to deal with looking into their
eyes when I talked to them. And strangely, that lack of physical presence gave
me a lot more confidence to be myself.
I once told my best friend that I felt more comfortable
talking to my internet friends about certain things than I did with her. Years
later, I found out that it had genuinely hurt her that I had felt that way. It occurred
to me recently how truly hurtful that was to say to someone who didn’t
understand my point of view. I loved my best friend, and still do, but she has
always been an incredibly social person who has never had any trouble making
friends or engaging in conversations with total strangers. (Example: when we
went to Orlando for my 21st birthday, I lost sight of her in a
Starbucks, only to turn around to find her chatting with probably the only
French-speaking person in the entire mall. That’s the kind of person she is.) I
have always been uncomfortable around people. I often say: I don’t make
friends, friends make me. I also have always had trouble with words (in the
talking sense, obviously not in the writing sense *pats self on back*). Telling my best friend that I would rather
talk to whom she deemed to be complete strangers was, and remains, a really
shitty thing to say. Even though at the time, it was the honest truth.
VIRTUAL PEOPLE ARE PEOPLE TOO
The term “real life” is thrown around a lot in contrast when
talking about the Internet world. This has always driven me bonkers. The people
I talked to on the Internet were just as real as I was: they had faces and hair
and insecurities and homework and feet and all that good stuff. They too had
problems with talking to people “in real life”. And no, while I have not met
most of them in the flesh, that does not lessen their impact on my life. They
were an audience for my thoughts and feelings, as well as for my creativity. My
internet peeps were my first ever audience for my writing. Until I started university
and was basically forced to let other people read my stories, I couldn’t bear
the very thought of it. I wrote a story for a school project in college and had
to literally leave the house when I finally let my mom read it. I owe what
shred of self-confidence I had as a teenager to that wonderful online community
of friends. We shared common interests without the fear of ridicule.
GOOD NEWS: NO ONE HAS YET TO TURN OUT TO BE A PREDATOR
Now, I’m sure there’s a whole subset of the internet that is
riddled with sexual predators (I’ve seen that episode of Law & Order: SVU), but maybe it’s ‘cause I’m too old for them now,
but I’ve yet to “befriend” any of them. While it’s a valid fear for parents to
have, I think it’s no longer the primary problem that their kids might face on the
internet. I was raised in a time where internet was new and unknown to a lot of
people, and Dateline NBC and America’s Most Wanted showed us a pretty
ugly side of this new-fangled thingamajig called the World Wide Web. Nowadays
(God, I’m making myself sound so old), everyone from a very young age has
internet access at their fingertips. The concept of “cyber bullying” did not
exist during my childhood, and now it’s a major problem in schools across the
world. The anonymity of the web can be used in a really, truly cruel way.
But guess what? It can also be a really, truly awesome
thing.
I have gone shopping and gone to the movies with my internet
friends. I have gone to dinner and to concerts and even gone on vacation with
my internet friends. I have crossed the border to have a sleepover with my
internet friends, and spent a wonderful weekend playing video games and telling
my internet friends’ parents all about being Canadian. I have gone to my
internet friends’ school plays and had them sleep over at my house. I’ve even
accidentally set up my internet friends with my school friends. They are real
people to me, and not for a second did I ever doubt that they were, and still
are, a part of my real life. They impacted my real life in a real way, and that
feels pretty damn real to me.
No comments:
Post a Comment