Let’s take a trip down memory lane to a time when “going online” wasn’t even a phrase.
Back then, life moved at a different rhythm. Without instant access to information, we had to wait for things. Want to know the weather? You caught the forecast on the evening news or checked the newspaper. Curious about a random fact? You’d dig through an encyclopedia (those giant, dusty books on the shelf) or ask someone who might know. There was no Google to settle debates in seconds, so arguments at the dinner table could last for days! (Or at least until someone got to the library)
I remember spending hours at the local library, flipping through card catalogs and scanning microfiche to research school projects. It wasn’t efficient, but there was something satisfying about the hunt. You felt like a detective piecing together clues. And when you found that perfect book or article? Pure victory.
Before social media, connecting with people meant actually seeing them. If you wanted to catch up with a friend, you called their house (and prayed their parents didn’t answer) or showed up at their door. Long-distance friendships? You wrote letters. Actual, handwritten letters. I can still smell the ink and feel the crinkle of paper as I sealed an envelope, wondering when my pen pal would write back. Weeks could pass before you got a reply, but when that letter arrived, it was like Christmas morning.
We hung out in person, too. The mall was our social network, where we’d roam in packs, share gossip over greasy food court fries and check out the latest CDs at the record store. There was no texting to coordinate plans—just a vague “meet me by the fountain at 3.” If someone was late, you waited. Or you left. No one was glued to a screen, so we were fully present, for better or worse.
Entertainment before the internet was a hands-on experience. Without streaming services, we relied on Blockbuster runs for movie nights, flipping through TV channels (all seven of them), or listening to the radio, hoping your favorite song would come on. I’d sit by my boombox with a blank cassette, finger hovering over the “record” button, ready to capture that one song before the DJ cut in. Mixtapes were our Spotify playlists and making one for someone was a labor of love.
Video games existed, but they were simpler. My Nintendo Entertainment System was a prized possession and blowing into cartridges to “fix” them was a sacred ritual. You didn’t have online walkthroughs, so you either figured out that boss level through trial and error or begged your older sibling for tips.
Without the internet, the world felt both bigger and smaller. Bigger because information wasn’t at your fingertips, so faraway places seemed mysterious, pieced together from travel brochures, National Geographic, or stories from that one friend who went on a cruise. Smaller because your world was your neighborhood, your school, your town. News traveled slowly and global events felt distant unless they hit the front page or the nightly broadcast.
There was no 24/7 news cycle to overwhelm you, no algorithm feeding you endless opinions. But that also meant you could miss things. If you didn’t catch the news or hear it through the grapevine, you were out of the loop. Ignorance was bliss, but it could also leave you clueless.
Don’t get me wrong, life before the internet wasn’t perfect. Research was a slog, miscommunication was rampant, and if you got lost driving, you were stuck unfolding a giant map or asking a gas station clerk for directions. But there was a certain magic in the slowness. You had to be patient, resourceful and present. You lived in the moment because there wasn’t a digital escape hatch in your pocket.
I’m not saying I’d trade my smartphone for a rotary phone (okay, maybe for a day), but there’s something about that pre-internet life that feels worth remembering. It was messier, slower, and sometimes frustrating, but it forced us to connect with the world in a way that felt raw and real.
So, do you remember life before the internet? Or if you don’t, can you imagine it? Drop a comment and share your thoughts!


