We gave
up our landline phone recently. We disconnected it and now we rely on our iPhones
to communicate with the outside world. I have had a smartphone for almost 2 years, but I rarely turned it on before.
I liked having a landline telephone. I do not particularly like talking on a cell phone. The sound quality is not as good and I have this nagging fear that talking on wireless will eventually give me a brain tumor. But having the landline had become so unpleasant that we really had to get rid of it.
The people who owned this house before us went bankrupt and defaulted on their mortgage. Apparently they skipped out on a lot of other debt, too. After we moved in (a little over a year ago) and got our landline phone installed we started getting harassing and threatening phone calls from their creditors demanding to talk to those people who lived here before us. They asked for the previous owners by name, and they would not believe me when I said I was not that person nor did that person live here.
I could not figure out why the horrid bill collectors were calling OUR telephone number. We neither kept nor received the same number the previous owners used. I guess the creditors must have used a reverse phone lookup, looking up the house number to find out what the current phone was for this address? That is the only thing I can think of. But if those bill collectors are so clever with the Internet why couldn’t they find the telephone number for the previous owners?
For over a year we lived with the previous owners’ problems. We stopped answering the landline phone when it rang, instead relying on Caller ID to screen our calls. We continued to get creditor-related calls for the previous owners almost every day. Of course we also got the usual scam telephone calls daily simply because we are retired people who are home during the day. We were under siege. Over time our phone situation began to drive me a little crazy.
One evening a few weeks ago I had to scramble out of the pool and run dripping wet into the house to grab the landline phone, thinking it must be a family member or a friend. Who else would call in the evening? I did not make it in time, but the caller left a message. My reward was a message from a nasty bill collector threatening me (actually not me, but you get the picture) with all sorts of legal actions. She left a return phone number. I usually know better than to call back – it gives them the idea that I am an easy mark. But I snapped. Like a raving maniac I called her screaming and yelling, roaring that the people they wanted did not live here (and plenty more). I am not proud of myself. I know it did no good, but I had a year's worth of pent up rage. I was shaking when I hung up. It took me a long time to get to sleep that night. Life is way too short for this kind of nonsense. The next day I called our service provider and had the landline disconnected.
Disconnecting the landline phone did not save all that much money, so there is no windfall incentive to make me happy it is gone. I am only happy not to get the damn calls all day. I hate being forced to do something against my will. I resent not having the landline, but there you go.
I am adjusting to the iPhone. Now I charge it every night, turn it on every day (!), and keep it close by me at all times. I text now, too. My daughter is delighted that I read and answer her texts in a more timely manner. My tween granddaughter, who reportedly still exists but has not been seen in weeks, recently texted me from the depths of her darkened bedroom. It was thrilling. T texted me at the grocery store to pick up something he forgot to put on the list. I messaged him some photos of our grandson riding a horse at the pumpkin farm yesterday. And I took the *@!# picture with the phone! If I get in an argument I can prove I am right wherever I may be as long as I can get a signal to google the question. This is pure magic, people! I urge oldsters everywhere to make the leap. I have even texted a question and received an answer from my son-in-law, MV. My grandson, N, will occasionally FaceTime me. This whole smartphone thing is much better than I thought it would be. I suppose it was past time for me to enter the modern world. Of course I entered it against my will, kicking and screaming all the way. But what else is new?
I liked having a landline telephone. I do not particularly like talking on a cell phone. The sound quality is not as good and I have this nagging fear that talking on wireless will eventually give me a brain tumor. But having the landline had become so unpleasant that we really had to get rid of it.
The people who owned this house before us went bankrupt and defaulted on their mortgage. Apparently they skipped out on a lot of other debt, too. After we moved in (a little over a year ago) and got our landline phone installed we started getting harassing and threatening phone calls from their creditors demanding to talk to those people who lived here before us. They asked for the previous owners by name, and they would not believe me when I said I was not that person nor did that person live here.
I could not figure out why the horrid bill collectors were calling OUR telephone number. We neither kept nor received the same number the previous owners used. I guess the creditors must have used a reverse phone lookup, looking up the house number to find out what the current phone was for this address? That is the only thing I can think of. But if those bill collectors are so clever with the Internet why couldn’t they find the telephone number for the previous owners?
For over a year we lived with the previous owners’ problems. We stopped answering the landline phone when it rang, instead relying on Caller ID to screen our calls. We continued to get creditor-related calls for the previous owners almost every day. Of course we also got the usual scam telephone calls daily simply because we are retired people who are home during the day. We were under siege. Over time our phone situation began to drive me a little crazy.
One evening a few weeks ago I had to scramble out of the pool and run dripping wet into the house to grab the landline phone, thinking it must be a family member or a friend. Who else would call in the evening? I did not make it in time, but the caller left a message. My reward was a message from a nasty bill collector threatening me (actually not me, but you get the picture) with all sorts of legal actions. She left a return phone number. I usually know better than to call back – it gives them the idea that I am an easy mark. But I snapped. Like a raving maniac I called her screaming and yelling, roaring that the people they wanted did not live here (and plenty more). I am not proud of myself. I know it did no good, but I had a year's worth of pent up rage. I was shaking when I hung up. It took me a long time to get to sleep that night. Life is way too short for this kind of nonsense. The next day I called our service provider and had the landline disconnected.
Disconnecting the landline phone did not save all that much money, so there is no windfall incentive to make me happy it is gone. I am only happy not to get the damn calls all day. I hate being forced to do something against my will. I resent not having the landline, but there you go.
I am adjusting to the iPhone. Now I charge it every night, turn it on every day (!), and keep it close by me at all times. I text now, too. My daughter is delighted that I read and answer her texts in a more timely manner. My tween granddaughter, who reportedly still exists but has not been seen in weeks, recently texted me from the depths of her darkened bedroom. It was thrilling. T texted me at the grocery store to pick up something he forgot to put on the list. I messaged him some photos of our grandson riding a horse at the pumpkin farm yesterday. And I took the *@!# picture with the phone! If I get in an argument I can prove I am right wherever I may be as long as I can get a signal to google the question. This is pure magic, people! I urge oldsters everywhere to make the leap. I have even texted a question and received an answer from my son-in-law, MV. My grandson, N, will occasionally FaceTime me. This whole smartphone thing is much better than I thought it would be. I suppose it was past time for me to enter the modern world. Of course I entered it against my will, kicking and screaming all the way. But what else is new?