A few nights ago I saw something unusual in the eastern sky.
It was around two o’clock in the morning and I was on my way to bed. The window
in my bathroom faces east and the first thing I noticed was usual enough – the
blinking wing light of a passenger plane heading north-west out of East Midlands
Airport. And then my eye
was caught by a most unusual pattern of lights just above the horizon at the
top of the hill.
It consisted of nine orange lights arranged in three
vertical rows of three forming a vertical rectangular shape. It moved slowly
across the sky – rather slower than the aircraft lights heading in the opposite
direction – and then stopped. The lights were much bigger than those on the
plane suggesting that the whole pattern was bigger than a commercial aircraft
or maybe much closer. It stayed still for a short while before descending and
disappearing behind the hilltop.
I hope my description is accurate enough to evoke a
visual image because I’ve never seen anything quite like it before. My usual
presumption when I see a stationery light in the sky rests on the almost
certain likelihood of it being a helicopter, but I’ve never seen such a craft
showing a pattern of lights like that. If anyone has a suggestion I would be
glad to hear it.
* * *
Meanwhile, my state of mind is not at its best. Over the
past ten years my world has contracted to a point where it amounts to little
more than tedious chores, troubled sleep, and trawling the internet for
something to interest me, usually with little success. This morning I woke up
disturbingly late and booted up my computer to find an email from my phone line
provider. It was titled ‘You will soon lose your broadband’ and advised me that
I was to make substantial changes to both my service provision and computer
connections if I was to avoid being confined to the cyber wasteland.
Well now, being confined to the cyber wasteland amounts to
being also confined to the functional wasteland these days, and so I rang my
broadband provider and asked ‘what the bloody hell is going on?’ A long and
fairly complex explanation was provided by a man with a strong Yorkshire accent (I think he said his name was John.)
I won’t bore you with the details; suffice it to say this:
My proclivities lie in such areas as music, quality literature, philosophy,
psychology, the state of the human condition, the beauty of landscape, and the
meaning of life and reality. I’m not a techno type. I have to accept that the
days when our functions were largely run by cables, physical switches, and
electricity are gone because that’s the way it is. But the microchip leaves me
cold and confused. And that’s how I felt after spending around half an hour
talking – or mostly listening – to John (or whatever.)
The one heartening thing he said was that these changes
might not have to be made until the end of the year. I wondered whether I might
be able to conspire to expire before then, because that would save me the
trouble, wouldn’t it? Maybe I’ll feel different tomorrow (if I have a tomorrow.)