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I'm feeling pretty indestructible right now. After all, I've survived yet another apocalyptic event. The Mayan calendar thing was just the latest in a dozen or so since I've been born. That makes me a pro at them or, perhaps, it just makes me old.

Thinking back to some of the apocalyptic predictions I've witnessed, the Mayan one has been one of the coolest. I loved all the silly memes and funny comic takes.

The apocalypse. Such good times.

Not all of the predictions have been fun.  Like in 1997 when the leader of the Heaven's Gate cult, Marshall Applewhite convinced his 38 followers to commit suicide with him so their souls could evacuate earth on a spacecraft trailing the Hale-Bopp Comet. That was so sad. Other predictions have just been wacky, like the Nibiru cataclysm in 2003, when a nutty Nancy Lieder claimed aliens from the Zeta Reticuli star system had passed messages to her through a brain implant, telling her that another planet would enter our solar system, causing a polar shift on the earth that would end in humanity's destruction.

The one I remember the most has to be the Y2K scare that took place in 1999. Why? Becuase, for once, there was an element of truth to all the madness. More than a few people were really freaked out. This was the deal: During the 1960s through to the late 1980s, software companies used two digits to represent a year (1984 was just "84"). As the 1990s drew near, they realized there might be a problem when the year 2000 came around. Would computers think the "00" meant 2000 or would they interpret it as 1900? If the answer was 1900, it would throw off many major industries, including utilities, airlines, manufacturing, and banking. The threat was real and everybody in the industry raced to fix the time bomb as it ticked away. Come 12:01 a.m., January 1, 2000, all the computers we depended on would fail us.

NOOOOOOOO!

Of course, that didn't happen. Computer programmers around the world made sure of it. But that didn't mean there weren't folks who cashed in on the crisis, selling supplies in case the end of the world was near. Journalists may have also exploited the hype, filling newspapers and magazines with tales of apocalyptic woe. There may even have been a bad action movie called Y2K where Lou Gossett, Jr. spares the world from eminent destruction set in motion by the millennium bug.

Below is something my son found at a library sale a few months ago. It's computer software designed to help your computer "survive the millennium bug!" You could "protect your PC while there's still time!"


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If you ever wondered what the millennium bug actually looked like, you can spot it in the upper right-hand corner.
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A hand is holding a stopwatch? Holy computer failure, Batman! That means time is running out!
Anyway, somehow we managed to survive the ordeal. I put another notch in my belt. If I live through a few more incidents like this, I just might try to become an action movie hero. Think Lou Gossett, Jr. would be willing to share the spotlight with me?
 


Comments

12/28/2012 20:43

Ah, your post brings back fond memories of yesteryear, Janene. I was in my 3rd year of medical school when Y2K came around, and was so busy in my clinicals that I completely forgot to freak out about the millennium! I do remember spending that New Year's Eve with my folks and actually staying up till after midnight to see if our computer crashed. LOL.

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12/29/2012 07:37

Ah, yes. 1999, as in "party like it's." It was a pretty crazy cool year full of predictions and parties. I'm sure you weren't the only ones keeping an eye on your computer that year. Too funny!

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12/29/2012 08:03

I had a friend at the time of the Y2 crisis who worked for NYS electric and gas who assured me the whole thing was a bit of a paranoiac hoax. I was skeptical anyway, but his expert opinion left me with little doubt.

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12/29/2012 08:18

Sounds like he was a good guy to know! I knew people in the computer biz who told me the same thing. Still, it was strange to see so many people get wrapped up in all of the hype, plus a small part of me did wonder if it would happen.

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12/30/2012 21:10

I'm not much of a believer, and yeah I do feel people try to take advantage of people who are gullible. It's all laughable until someone dies for their beliefs.

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12/31/2012 07:23

Absolutely. That Hale-Bopp Comet really upset me and that wasn't the only one that ended in tragedy. This whole thing runs such a strange gaut -- from silly memes to horrifically sad actions.

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01/02/2013 08:06

Ciaoooo!! I can vaguely recall the Y2K scare haha. I think I was more scared at how everyone else reacted on it and I recalled feeling anxiety when we were counting down to 2000. Were the lights go out? Would things explode...? Yeah, all sorts of things went through my head haha. I steered away from the whole Maya thing as well, for some reason I just get a tad annoyed about things like this. People are so easily influenced by things like this that it's not even funny anymore. I read stories that people actually build their own "ark" stuffed with products to survive an apocalypse. How much money did they spent to get it all done? And now they are stuck with it.

Ps.: I'll answer your question about fairy tales today!! :D

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01/02/2013 13:26

There are a few out there that really take the apocalyptic stories to heart. I also wonder how much money they've spent preparing. Who knows, though. They'd sure be ready for a hurricane or flood! As for your P.S., I'm thinking I might pop over to your blog. ;) Can't wait to see what you've got going on!

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01/03/2013 10:55

I remember Y2K. Wow that one was a little scary. lol. I knew the Mayan one was hype because I researched it. I don't think I paid attention to the others. lol Fun post.

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01/03/2013 11:16

The Mayan one was fun, though. Luckily, there were few who took it seriously. Most used it for fodder for some really good laughs. As for the other ones, you're smart not to pay attention. They're such bunk, albeit fun bunk most of the time.

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