28 October 20XX
My Dear Lucilius:
Today as I was going
about what has now become my “ordinary day”, it struck me that
somehow “The End Of Civilization” to date is very different than
what had been portrayed.
To be fair, I do not
live urban environment where I am sure things are far more
difficult now than ever before. Our lives, at least in our small
part of the world, are somewhat changed but not drastically at this
point, at least not yet. We do not have power a great deal at all
now of course, transit between here and anywhere else has ceased –
or else become an expedition, and our converse with the outside world
has dwindled to the occasional burst of InterWeb News or an update
via a radio broadcast. In all of these things of course, life is
definitely very different than it was before.
But we have
experienced power outages before, snowstorms that buried us for days
on end and made travel virtually impossible – and the loss of power
and loss of travel made the outside world a far away things as it is
now.
Yes, I understand
that if left unchecked, things can become much, much worse. In some
ways, perhaps this was a better way: an economic collapse at the
speed it happened seems to have made a nuclear war a non-option at
this point (of course, who knows), a sort of collapse without
widespread destruction. And maybe the war will yet come, if some
country is left with enough command and control structure in place in
a world which seems to be struggling for survival now.
But today, things
seem very ordinary. A little colder, a little quieter, a little less
exciting in all ways – but still very ordinary.
I wonder if in the
collapse of the great civilizations it all felt the same as well, a
gentle settling until the water gracefully passes over the head
without realizing one has slipped under.
Your Obedient
Servant, Seneca
Not as popular an account as current doomsday scenarios, but preferable. For some, it will be this way, for others it will be difficult. Well written.
ReplyDeleteThank you Leigh!
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, far less exciting than lots of movies and books. But perhaps more accurate.
And yes - urban locations in particular (I suspect) will write a very different story indeed.