Yesterday's dinosaurs

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The cell phone was dead — not just dying but dead. I’m not really very good at operating these gadgets, and I assume this itty bitty contraption has more bells and whistles than I’ll ever know, partly because the owner’s manual was way beyond my skill set.

Nevertheless, I’m smart enough to realize when the thing has died. No lights, no beeps, no funny little icons that I don’t recognize ... just darkness on the screen.

OK. Not a big deal. I’ll do just like people have done for years. I’ll find a pay phone, drop in a quarter or two (I think it used to be a dime) and make the call that had to be made. But after several stops and just as many exits and entrances back into my vehicle, I quickly realized I had a major problem ...

Where have all the pay phones gone?

Really. Think about it. When’s the last time you actually saw a pay phone? Where did they go? Last thing I knew every gas station, every restaurant, seemingly every little corner of my world had a pay phone, but now without me even realizing it, these convenient machines have slipped into extinction — the dinosaurs of the telecommunications world, so to speak.

I guess it makes sense. After all, who needs a pay phone anymore? As call waiting, caller ID and ring tones made their way into our vocabularies, the silver machines with places for us to slip in our coins quietly slipped away. They didn’t say good-bye. They didn’t tell us they were leaving. They didn’t even wave as they rode off into the sunset to that big warehouse of obsolete items in the sky. Instead, they just left — perhaps even a bit bitter from how we had ignored them, forgotten all about them — their bellies empty of change and their dial tones fading.

Was it that long ago I was given a dime to put into my saddle shoe, just in case I needed to use the pay phone to call home? Somewhere along the line I had to add another dime to my shoe, as the price went up, yet still it seemed like a pretty good bargain for a kid who needed to call home. I know the price eventually escalated to a quarter, but in the scope of things, nobody seemed to mind. After all, if you needed a telephone, 25 cents wasn’t a big deal.

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