Today is the future of the past and the history of the future

I often wonder what life will be like a century from now

will we all travel in driverless flying cars

future medicine will perhaps eradicate all disease

technology will advance so much that we will hardly have to work at all

a century ago people tried to predict our lives today

we were supposed to be driving flying cars by now

firefighters were predicted to extinguish all fires from the air

entire cities should by now be covered by massive roofs

many saw the automation that we actually have today

although not exactly in the way it has developed

they predicted home automation to eliminate housemaids

robot cleaners being controlled by levers, pulleys and wires

farming automation was predicted to replace tractors

the farmer should be sitting on his front porch today

pulling levers that move wires and pulleys

controlling mechanical devices that plant and harvest in his fields

technology was expected to make our lives easier

not only by automating many manual processes

it was to liberate us from working long hours

giving us all much more time for extended leisure activities

technology has indeed made us much more productive

we can access information and process data so much faster today

but businesses demand profits and low costs

the dream of reduced working hours has never materialized

as the population of the planet increases 

we create more pollution and environmental damage

plastic waste fills our oceans and sea levels are rising

while politicians dismiss this as fake news

our minds should not be focussed on having more time off for play

lets stop dreaming about owning personal flying machines

our energies and creativity should be directed to sustaining our planet for future generations

a century from now people will probably look back at us with disbelief

Be them millenniums or minutes ago

I can remember so well those oh so boring history classes at school

The tattered old books on ancient history

Handed down from generations ago

Reflecting the age of the stories they told

Uninspiring stories told by weary burned out teachers

It was so hard back then to understand the relevance of it all

When later classes focused on modern history

Something grabbed my attention

A detailed analysis of the Cuban missile crisis

A lightbulb went off in my head

Bringing back the taste of fear

When I was a seven year old hiding under the school desk

Daily drills on sheltering from a nuclear attack

I really thought we we all going to die back then

Remembering vividly when Kennedy was shot

It felt like the King of the world was no longer there to protect me

I can now look back over my lifetime of personal historical moments

Popular music and the Beatles

Armed struggles in Northern Ireland

Falling in love

Graduating from college

My first job

The Vietnam war

One small step for a man but one giant leap for mankind

Buying my first house

The birth of my daughter and my son

My first computer

The start of the internet 

Seeing the falling of the Berlin Wall

War in the Falklands and Margaret Thatcher

Liverpool FC winning the European Cup

Plane hijackings and harrowing terrorist attacks

911 and desperately trying to pick up my kids from school in Manhattan

Getting divorced

Falling in love again

Seeing my kids graduate from college

The birth of my Grandson

Entering retirement

Taking on new challenges

Watching the world changing during Covid

No doubt historians are now writing stories about it all

For the enlightenment of future generations

History is the the study of past events

Be them millenniums or minutes ago

We must all learn from them

Wodensday

So its Wednesday today

Well it was when I wrote this

What exactly does that mean I wonder

In old English Wednesday was called Wodensday

Named after the Anglo-Saxon god Woden

Woden was the leader of the wild hunt

His name was made from two words

Wod meaning violently insane

en meaning headship

The latin origin of today is Mercurii meaning day of Mercury

Mercury was the Roman god of commerce and travel

He was also associated with thievery eloquence and science

Mercury was the messenger of the other gods

So today you can either go on a totally wild hunt for something

Under the watchful eye of your violently insane leader

Or 

Travel somewhere and eloquently execute a fraudulent scientific deal 

Knowing that your leader will spill the beans

Civilizations evolve but today some folks behave exactly like their ancestors

RIP pistons and cranks

The internal combustion engine

Once the king of traveling machines

Is soon to be an old relic

Replaced by electric motors

Overtaken by hydrogen fuel cells

Future generations will look back

At the golden era of pistons and carburetors

With the same nostalgia we hold for steam engines today

We will remember the glorious roar of the V8

The throaty exhausts of open wheel race cars

Yearn for the sweet smell of hot oil

Marvel at the skills of those who maintained them

We will no longer be driving cars or piloting planes

Vehicles will become autonomous taxis

Hailed by your smart device

Taking you to your destination quietly

Without polluting the planet

Or plundering its fossil fuel reserves

Cars will morph into driverless pods of all sizes

Either flying or speeding along designated tracks

Small ones for a couple of people

Medium sizes for families and groups

Mass transit will take the commuters

Drones will deliver to your door everything you need

Cars buses trains and planes will all integrate

Nobody will ever have to steer or hit the brakes

You will engage in work or entertainment while traveling

Perhaps watching movies about old combustion engines

Wondering how people ever controlled those relics

Children will study the history of transportation

Flipping through images of horse drawn vehicles

Watching videos of hissing steam trains

Turning the page of the internal combustion engine

Be them millenniums or minutes ago

I can remember so well those oh so boring history classes at school

The tattered old books on ancient history

Handed down from generations ago

Reflecting the age of the stories they told

Uninspiring stories told by weary burned out teachers

It was so hard back then to understand the relevance of it all

When later classes focused on modern history

Something grabbed my attention

A detailed analysis of the Cuban missile crisis

Brought back the taste of fear

Images of hiding under my school desk at seven years old

Daily drills on sheltering from a possible nuclear attack

I really believed we we all going to die back then

Remembering vividly when Kennedy was shot

It felt like the King of my world was no longer there to protect me

I can now look back over my lifetime of personal historical moments

Popular music and the Beatles

Armed struggles in Northern Ireland

Graduating from college

My first job

The Vietnam war

One small step for a man but one giant leap for mankind

Buying my first house

The birth of my daughter and my son

My first computer

The start of the internet 

Seeing the falling of the Berlin Wall

War in the Falklands and Margaret Thatcher

Liverpool FC winning the European Cup

Plane hijackings and harrowing terrorist attacks

911 and desperately trying to pick up my kids from school in Manhattan

Seeing my kids graduate from college

Entering retirement

In January 2021 I saw a chilling live news broadcast

An angry mob marching towards the US Capital

Breaking through barriers and storming the building

Those images are burned into my memory banks

No doubt historians are now writing stories about it all

For the enlightenment of future generations

History is the the study of past events

Be them millenniums or minutes ago

We must all learn from them