“Has anyone seen my…” “That’s weird. I swear I put it here three days
ago…” Sound familiar? Probably not, but it was a good way to up my word
count. If those words did ring a bell, however, then you are someone
who is all too familiar with one of the most horrifying experiences
imaginable: Accidentally throwing something out.
Whether this is done in the real world or on the computer (no
offense, super-nerds) there are several ways this can happen; each one
more terrifying than the last. Though some of the stories from this
happening (as long as it didn’t happen to you, of course) can be quite
funny, it is still a deeply troubling event. Whether you just emptied
the recycling bin on your computer before looking inside or maybe
something fell into your actual recycling bin at home, accidentally
throwing something out can have devastating consequences. Inevitably,
you don’t realize you have mistakenly rid yourself of something
important until you have an important reason to use it. You can go 6
months without having to refer to your extensive collection of
decorative napkins that you conveniently store on the edge of the table,
hovering over the menacing garbage can that someone strategically
placed there. But then the day that the mayor wants to come over and see
your collection and give you the key to the city, the napkins are
halfway to Michigan in the back of a truck surrounded by moulding food,
balls of lint, and the credit card bill you’ve been looking for that’s
now 3 weeks overdue. It happens to all of us. Even the people who pride
themselves in always knowing where something is, or claim they have
never lost anything, are probably missing something right now. That or
they just really don’t get out much.
There’s really no worse feeling than realizing you’ve just lost
something that you basically can never get back. While yes, there is
still the option of rummaging through piles of garbage, desperately
searching for something that even if you do find you probably don’t want
to be holding for too much longer. You can do the same thing in the
cyber world. Or you could do a system restore which is essentially a
do-over at life. By doing so, however, you are risking possibly losing
even more. All technicalities aside, once you’ve thrown something out by
accident, it’s gone for good. It can be a traumatizing experience that
involves 5 stages: Denial, acceptance, disbelief, denial again
and- finally- breaking something.
Okay, yes, there are far scarier things out there than misplacing
that video of you dancing at the party with a stuffed monkey named
Alfonzo (but don’t worry the video is definitely online somewhere). But
the threat of actually losing something important to you because your
elbow bumped it off the desk or you accidentally deleted a folder from
your desktop without looking at what was inside is a legitimate concern.
My advice to you is back-up everything. Not in a paranoid way (though
that is shockingly effective) but just making sure you always have a
copy of something that’s important to you. You never know when a sudden
lightning storm might cut the power at home or your laptop just decides
now would be a good time to play a prank on you and cease to function
entirely. That’s almost as unpredictable as inviting your 5 year old
cousin over and suddenly your worldly possessions are gone off the face
of the Earth. Or covered in drool. …Do 5 year olds drool? Oh to be young
again.
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