Winging it

Mar. 7th, 2009 10:38 am
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[personal profile] elfs
One summer in 1990 me and a couple of college buddies stopped in Aberdeen, Washington, and rented an efficiency apartment for a week. We ate peanut butter & jelly sandwiches, cooked ramen on a single plug-in coil and a battered metal pot, and drove hither and thither up and down the coast. My friend Mark was scoping the place out for details for a novel he was writing. This was before I took up writing seriously; I was mostly there for the lark of travel.

I passed by that complex on the way up to Quinalt. It's all boarded up now, but the one thing I most clearly remember from that time was the disconnect I felt between what I knew and what I was doing. I didn't know crap about renting a room for a week, or what the laws were where I was, or whatever. I'm pretty sure neither Mark or Gene had any clue either. (My most memorable quote from that trip came from Gene, when we got lost one night: "You're right, I'm sorry. This was a clusterfuck.") We assumed that a working car and enough cash would get us the hell out of there if we needed it to. One night in Kansas, I bought us an extra four hours of sleep past check-out by slipping an extra five bucks to the motel owner. Mark, the Ayn Rand-reading libertarian, thought I was crazy, that wasn't an option on the hotel's prices, while I, the liberal do-gooder at the time, knew damn well that I could pay the motel owner for any legal service he was willing to sell, including the allowance to sleep late.

It was Mark's car; I remember stealing his keys one morning and taking the thing to get its oil changed. We'd driven all the way from Orlando to Seattle and into Aberdeen before I'd checked the maintenence log and realized his last oil change was 15,000 miles ago, before we'd left Florida. The oil came out slower than sour crude and we found a small tomato inside the air filter. The technician was amazed. On the drive home, the water pump started to malfunction and the car couldn't go above 55 without overheating or below 20 without the onboard computer screaming at us. He was an idiot. Gene was an idiot. I was an idiot. That's what being in your early 20's is like: you don't know shit about shit. If you've been lucky to have enough money most of your life, you know less than that. You're winging it.

Life has remarkable fault tolerance for guiding young people in their 20s through that prolonged crisis of ignorance and into something less melodramatic and more productive. People helped us, gave us slack they'd never give someone in his 40s, someone who you expect by now should know what the hell he's doing. They did that because they could remember being young once, and they remembered being an idiot.

I ought to write a story about how cultures with far fewer children and far more multi-century vibrant adults will have far less slack for the individuals among them who don't know what they're doing. Who don't have the wisdom of experience. Who have a lot of passion and only the shallowest of channels gouged by life out of their souls with which to direct it.

Date: 2009-03-07 07:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] woggie.livejournal.com
So, how does a tomato get into an air filter?

I mean, was he working on the car and eating one day and forgot he left it inside the car, or is there some other explanation?

Date: 2009-03-08 03:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
I have no idea. Imagining Mark working on a car is a bit like imagining a hippopotamus performing brain surgery.

Date: 2009-03-09 03:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] woggie.livejournal.com
I'm really making an effort to determine just what that looks like. :)

The role of AI in tranhumanist societies.

Date: 2009-03-07 08:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pandakahn.livejournal.com
From your past writings (and I do apologize, as this is my take on your work and holds little or no semblance to what you meant when you wrote your work...) I would see society working, culturally and socially, to "clue" those who are not, and if a person was truly "clueless" (with out 'clue', and unable to be "clue'd" in) then providing for them to keep them safe and take care of them.

I am not re-visioning Pendor as a sci\fi nanny state, but more as a Haldeman (sp?) "Voyages to Yesteryear" type of society in which the members of the society (and the AI I feel would play a large role int his area)take care of those who don't get it. This doesn't mean that the "clueless" would be prevented form killing themselves out of stupidity, but that, since they come from a culture of abundance with the technology to support these actions, when "shit" happens to the "clueless" (tm?) forces will be available to step in an assist (rescue?) them from the events that have over taken them.

Think of all the times in your writing that an AI has made the events of the day smooth out so that life is easy. While Ken does some of the mechanical work on his own vehicles, I had inferred that most basic maintenance and support work was done by automated systems run by AI. If I am wrong I can go back and reread the Journal entries again (3 to 4 times a year on average, so not like I wasn't going to reread them again in a few months any way....)

Imagine the trip you took all those years ago. Now imagine that trip with the full support of Pendorian technology/society/culture. After adding in an AI (or the local AI if an AI buddy did not come on the trip with you) how would it be different? I can see the conflict in the historical events, but what would they be in the Pendorian setting?

... And this is why I read your blog. First thing after a cup of coffee and I am now thinking about things that might have never crossed my field of vision.

Thanks.

MPK

Re: The role of AI in tranhumanist societies.

Date: 2009-03-07 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] antonia-tiger.livejournal.com
Extreme Sports.

Even with the AI and general tech support, in a sport there might be artificial limits on the help permitted.

And being able to rebuild somebody after a near-total failure doesn't mean what happened wasn't traumatic and memorable.

Date: 2009-03-07 11:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] codeamazon.livejournal.com
I'm still winging it. I've never raised a teen before. We met with the Rabbi today to plan for his Bar Mitzvah. I've never done THAT before -- I was a nervous wreck. The last time I moved, before two years ago, I was 20 and my stuff fit in my car. I moved without a clue. This time I had two kids and a dog I was responsible for, but despite two YEARS of planning, things went off just as haphazardly.

That's life, no?

Best comment on aging I ever saw was:

"You are old when you do things for the last time more frequently than you do things for the first time." It has become something I check in with regularly.

Date: 2009-03-08 04:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lisakit.livejournal.com
When I read stuff like this I sometimes wonder if I was ever really young. I knew way too much when I was 20.

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