My dad made a "Face Book" to find "nice people"

So, to preface, my father is a 65 year old Persian man, who doesn't really have a concept of anything past the 1990s. He doesn't understand credit cards, he cannot make a call with a cellular nor smart phone, and he thinks Amazon makes every computer ever. The most experience he has with tech is playing poker on a tablet. And he doesn't know how to get rid of the micro-transaction popups, so he gives up when those happen.

So of course he'd be the prime person to use Facebook. Wait what?

He walked into my room today, acting very nervous, and asked me, quietly, "'Chary'...What is a, I may say this wrong...eh...Face Book?" I told him it's a site where people post about their life, basically, and share pictures. He was confused, but he tried to accept it. After all, he still thinks to share a picture, you have to go to a place to get film developed and printed. But he'd heard from a friend of his that people can "talk" to each other, without phone numbers. He had to know what kind of magic allowed something that wild and new.

When I told him that you can indeed talk to people by using "something sorta like a typewriter, yeah", he excitedly asked me to make an account for him. He wanted to talk to his sisters in Iran, and catch up with them. So as I'm getting one of my alt emails for an account, he asks me, "Do they need my address? I bet I have to give them my address, right? Will I break your mom's Facebook if I make one!?" then he starts to worry. I'm trying my best to hide my laughter, and I tell him it's okay, he doesn't need to worry. Then, he pulls out a ten dollar bill, and tells me to "Pay for a Face Book this way". I just lose it at this point and burst out laughing. First of all, he thought he needed to pay for Facebook. Second, he thought he thought I could send the money in the mail for it. That's too funny.

Once I finalize his account, he gets all excited. I try to teach him how to use the laptop, telling him to click on the search bar, and type in who he wants to find. He doesn't understand what a click is. Agonizingly, I teach him from step 1 how to use this new and wondrous technology. He still can't get it. So I give up and type his sister's name in, and find her profile, and friend it. Dad doesn't seem to fully understand anything that's going on, but he seems to grasp that now he can talk with his sister. He dictates a message, which I type, and I send it.

Finally finished, I go sit down and play some games and write. He continually calls me back into the living room, for different issues. He accidentally hit the windows key, so he thinks he broke the computer. Go back, sit down. Get called back, because he doesn't understand why his brother "liked" his message. What is a like!? Get called back to solve the mysterious issue of him clicking this weird thing called Google. Go back, sit down, grab my controller... and get called back, because he's sad. Why is he sad? He clicked an ad that told him he could get free things by clicking it. Cue an eye twitch. Install Adblock. Go back to my room.

Then finally, once last time, he asks me how to find more people to talk to. I tell him to type what he wants to find, in the facebook search. So I watch him stare at the screen, and one by one, type in letters. I glance back up at the screen to see "nice people" typed into the facebook bar. I don't know whether to "d'awww" or die from laughter.

My dad might not know much about computers, but he's learning, and in quite possibly the funniest way possible.

Comments

My dad used to pass out every 5 minutes after turning on a laptop. Now he spends hours on his iphone spamming @therealdonaldtrump and whoever fighting over the internet about how chemicals turned the frogs gay. A world where knowledge of your imagination can be reached, but is wasted on being a jerk lol.
 
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Chary what is a like? I can imagine that with that distinct (but really smooth) Iranian accent. It's cute lol. I remember being frustrated helping my parents out with the things we perceived as trivial on the computer. It's amazing when you see how easily they adapt now with phones/mobile devices. Try that and he'll call you less. You're gonna miss it when they stop though xD
 
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Helping tech-illiterate family get their hands on technology is something wonderful. I've been helping my grandfather and grandmother with technology (the former knows how the basics of how to use a phone, whatsapp, skype and his email, the latter didnt know anything when I started but now likes to play her card games on the computer) for four years now, and tbh, I don't see when people say "tech support for family is hell" when it comes to grandparents (I can totally see where it's coming from for my more tech-literate family but still).

They're nothing but nice to me, instantly accept if something can't be done and for whatever reason they insist on paying me (I dont want their money for it as I do what I do for them because I like them, not because I get paid for it and it makes me feel my kindness is being bought out), even if it's something super inconsequential (one notable time is the time I cycled over to my grandfather because he "couldnt hear anyone talk on the phone", turns out his volume was turned down).

It's just a joy to me to see them learn how to use technology, even if they won't ever reach the degree of capability someone 20 years younger than them will reach.
 
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At least he isn't taging you in pictures of porn stars or half nude models on Facebook.
 
Cybersecurity for Dummies:
Rule #1: Don't let your aged relative use anything that is known to be named with "face" and "book" that sends imaginary letters for free. You might end up with an infected device and a therapy with a psychologist
 
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Wow. I wonder why he was so in the dark. Even the older people i knew could understand some what of the new technologies. I thought my grandmother was funny when i had to showed her how to swipe to go to the next picture in photos and had to explain to her that because something unexpected happened like an ad or she accidentally touched something that the phone isn't broken. Great story though. Made me smile.
 
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@Acrux my dad spent most of the late 90s-2000s working at a restaurant where he'd just work and come home and watch TV and sleep. Nothing really else. The biggest revelation to him was when we changed from VHS to DVD and...he still called them "video tapes". Something about him, he just never wanted to learn about new technology because so long as there was a TV with football, and there was a newspaper somewhere, he didn't need anything else. Now he's retired, he's finally realizing there's a ton of new things in the world since 1995 lol.
 
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Huh. I never thought I'd read about someone else on GBATemp having old Persian relatives that don't understand a thing about the modern world. Guess I'm not as alone as I thought I was.
 
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I am curious,@Chary :

Is he still active on Facebook ? :rofl2:
(I think in the meantime he has discovered WhatsApp...)
 
He uses it for PMs with family, but never makes posts on his wall. He just discovered What'sApp last week actually! And now he video calls with people too...but he usually has the camera pointed mostly at the ceiling.
 
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