Shifting past some old memories (and picking up a few lessons along the way)
Its currently 8:00 pm here. Hot as usual. It’s just hell on earth here in the Philippines nowadays, when nothing, save for the ever-reliable aircon unit can relieve you of the intense heat. Yesterday it clocked at 37 degrees, with the air becoming so arid that you’d literally sweat buckets before you manage to get within a hundred feet away from home. Not that home is of any comfort anyway. Tonight the mood is quite nostalgic, not because of the god-awful heat storm outside, but because of a literal timecapule I just opened, one in grave danger of impending deletion.
Let’s roll back a few hours ago, back to around 3:00 pm. I was supposed to be writing a couple of Wikipedia-style articles right now, so I can finally land a job in one of the big-shot publishing companies I applied in. Feeling extremely bummed out and stressed because of the overpowering heat, instead of pushing and pulling and grinding myself into mopping up my work (managed to finish one out of three), I took a time-out and peered into my Facebook account’s news feed.
I found several links and notifications which didn’t even begin to dent the armored sphere of my interest level; some game application requests, several cheesy status messages about broken hearts (courtesy of the multitude of teenage students proliferating my list) and a lot of tumblr-related posts. In short, nothing out of the ordinary for me.
I was about to log out and continue working when I noticed a link posted by one of my college classmates. It’s a shared link from Yahoo! containing news of a mass deletion which is about to happen in Friendster, the largely-defunct social networking site that pioneered this damn particular internet craze.
The news immediately tugged at my heartstrings and spurred me into action. I haven’t used Friendster in a very long time; the overwhelming superiority of Facebook simply did too much to make people abandon it. But the thought of all those years I had spent trying to accumulate testimonials for my ego’s gratification, something about those memories being deleted en masse with no hope of recovery made me really sad. So I went ahead and logged into a world which I have long decided to leave, my confidence broken in my foolish assumption that it will always be there, waiting for me.
Visiting it was like roaming in a ghost town populated only by memories. Few, if any of my friends were still using their accounts, and as such they remained frozen in time, back to when life was still quite a bit less tense for everyone. The profiles inhabiting the news feed paraded many familiar, yet impossibly youthful faces, for most have been left as they were by their owners months, even years ago. To the right I saw that my joined groups hadn’t been updated since 2008, when it was still our main hub of activity. There is a bunch of games available which weren’t there during my last visit—an obvious attempt to stifle the user bleeding caused by Facebook. Not that I cared enough to try them anyway, for I have long outgrown games. My old blog is still there, still very much functional (for now), containing a treasure-trove of emotional write-ups reflective of the lower mental level I had two, three, even four or five years ago.
Then I proceeded to wander around my profile page, which still sports a green-clad picture of me in a very girly posture. The music application I installed years ago, an mp3 player featuring a song by Within Temptation, started playing a very melancholic tune that played into my faded preference for such melodies. I remembered that I used to like gothic, dark-themed and operatic songs that fueled the shallow, youthful pains I cultivated, in contrast to my current taste for techno, hip-hop and dance songs that are upbeat and lively. The testimonials just above the mp3 featured several by my second (and last) girlfriend, as well as a few ones from younger versions of my college and highschool classmates. They were filled with many cheesy remarks, reminiscent of the aforementioned irritants I have to deal with on Facebook every day. It made me cringe somewhat, though the warm, sincere ones made me yearn for the sort of affection you could only get from a girl who loves you.
Looking at my stored pictures, I couldn’t help but crack up a smile and feel quite ashamed of the stark differences between the old me and current me. The old one was (ironically) much younger and less stressed-looking, but he was still so immature and even buffoonish at times, always so unaware of his surroundings. He looked like a total geek, with little knowledge of the workings of life. He wore shirts that were too big for him, pants that were cut too low, and was rail-thin to boot, with hair that was only beginning to get sparser. Personality-wise he was an idealistic fool who believed that he had seen hell, when he hadn’t even experienced the inebriating effects of college life yet.
Young David was someone who wanted everyone to listen to his stories, who unabashedly prodded people into replying to his unsolicited testimonials and messages at his personal pace, rather than on other people’s. He was childish and inconsiderate, thus everyone often tried their best to ignore him. He also tried to poke people into talking about the things he liked the most—romantic experiences involving him and his former girlfriends—by asking them about their own experiences. If there wasn’t any to be had, he kept his guard up for notifications that involved such happenings and then presented himself for a companion and a chat. It usually worked to his favor, but it tended to annoy people very much indeed, and he would often sulk when they berated him for it.
Yet for all his flaws, I remember Young David as being a fresh breath of intellect for those who could understand his quirks and see them for his own honest intentions. He was caring and thoughtful to a fault, and could still afford to smile without a care in the world. He reveled in the foolish, but ultimately blissful ignorance of youth, deeming himself as capable of anything when he was so limited. Physically he was less well-built than I, but he had substantially better features, brandishing no scars, no wrinkles, and no frown lines. His skin was perfectly smooth; his eyes were good enough to go around without high-grade glasses hanging around his nose bridge.
He had no interest in getting jobs yet because he still had the protective excuse of school tucked under his belt. Of course, it was a valid reason back then; he hadn’t conquered highschool and college yet, thus he could frolic around with friends whom I had long since lost contact with. He could communicate freely with his first and second girlfriends through testimonials and other tokens of affection. He hadn’t found any purpose in thinking ahead of everybody yet, which explains why he had so little to worry about. He could indulge himself in video games with little repercussion, and feed himself with ideas quickly because his memory wasn’t as impaired as mine is. And he was still very innocent, knowing little about the topics of sex, politics, and other evil things that have come to proliferate my mind. Lastly, he never stopped believing in the general goodness of people and the tired notion that life is simply a matter of playing games to pass it by.
It was then that I realized something that didn’t help ease my longing for the years passed by. This David was a very different person from a very different time, preserved for my current perusal by Friendster. And the physical proof of this person’s existence is about to disappear forever.
I have often told myself—and others—that I have come a very long way since those days, that I have shed many of the ‘impurities’ that inhabited me and transformed into a different person, a better person in general, so to say. I still feel very much superior to what I was, and I’d often rub my current achievements and talents in the face of those who would choose to remember my younger self in order to make me feel bad. But even though I have become a bit more successful and broad-minded in the years since, I fear that I wasn’t able to preserve many of the good qualities that Young David had. Gone was the general affectation he felt for others; the level of care he lavished on those he loved has been replaced by a far more cynical, far-less willing version, more mechanical and generalized than unique and specific. Now I can freely choose those I would like to care for, and I would still care very much for those select people. But then again, I won’t give a rat’s ass about the welfare of the general public, because their pains are their own, self-incurred problems. I tend to let others worry about their lives and then continue caring only about my own concerns. I had thought that to be a very cool thing for awhile; now I consider it to be a shame.
I definitely don’t regret what I’ve developed into, for I’m not a monster, nor will ever have the guts to become one. But peering into this hidden, forgotten world made me see just how far I have actually come… And how far, in some respects, I have fallen.
If I had been able to maintain the Younger David’s good qualities to mix with the knowledge and understanding that I can now utilize, who knows how many more friends I could have made, or retained. Maybe people would care about my shyke too, respect me more, love me more now.
And maybe, just maybe, it’s not too late to reclaim those lost ideals.
The original purpose of my visit to Friendster was left unachieved; I wanted to save those old pictures and blog posts before they are deleted forever. But now I’m considering leaving them as is, to let them disappear altogether. Now that Young David, who still lives in Friendster has reminded me of my current limitations and the idyllic things that I once possessed, maybe I don’t need to. He reminded me of a few lessons about myself that I hardly expected to come across again.
Of course, I hope that this long-ass post might inspire some of you to rummage through ‘yourselves’ (AKA your old accounts). Who knows? Maybe you’d even find a piece of yourself that you thought was lost forever behind those humiliating college pictures and old lovey-dovey poses with your exes. |