For those not familiar with dot matrix printers, I would urge you to watch a video of one in action. Here’s a simple example that I found on youtube that gives shows the printer in action. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A_vXA058EDY
As for those that do recall this, now archaic piece of technology, I hope that you are thinking fondly of its whirring and buzzing sounds, and of course your long, patient, waits for it to complete its task.
For the purposes of the coming discussion, it would seem make more sense to compare the process using a 3D printer, as that technology is certainly more in line, and in use, with the current state of printing, and also, human beings. However, given the constraints of this two-dimensional medium, I am using the dot matrix comparison.
I like to imagine, that each human form is generated similarly, printed, if you will, in extremely rapid fashion, by an individualized dot matrix printer. This printer starts out printing a human being at the cellular level, and moves in rapid fashion, growing along with the budding life, moving faster, and faster, and adding layer upon layer to the person.
The person eventually develops a symbiotic relationship to the printer and encourages and manipulates it through choices like diet, exercise, and an uncountable amount of life choices. The printer ceaselessly generates this form to which it is bound. It replaces cells as they die, it creates muscle when the person strains themselves, and removes it when they do not. It mends skin and tissue when torn, and repairs broken bones. And so, for years and years and years, it maintains a form. In seeing it as a dot matrix printer, generating a dot matrix human, I like to think of the person like this:
0101010
010101010
01010101010
01010101010
010101010
0101010
010
010
0101010101010101010101010
0101010101010101010101010
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
01 01010101010101 01
01010101010101
01010101010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
0101 0101
0101 0101
010 101
010101 101010
Over time though, small issues occur with the printer. The person does not wish for these things to happen, and may try every possible course of prevention, but no machine last forever. The change may be virtually imperceptible, at first:
0101010
010101010
01010101010
01010101010
010101010
0101010
010
010
0101010101010101010101 0
0101010101010101010101010
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
01 01010101010101 01
01010101010101
01010101010101
010101 010101
01 01 010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
0101 0101
0101 0101
010 101
010101 101010
But change occurs nonetheless. Some flake of debris enters the printers mechanism, or a small tear occurs on the ribbon, and the person is never the same again.
These mild blips and omissions may not hamper the person immediately, but as more time passes, the printer continues to break down.
0101010
010101010
01010101010
01 0101010
010101010
0101010
010
010
0101010101010101010 10
01010101 101010101010
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 01010101010101 0101
0101 0101010101 01 0101
01 01010101010101 01
01 0101010101
01010101010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
01 01 010101
010101 010101
010101 010101
0101 0101
0101 0101
0 101
010101 10 0
Little by little, bit by bit, the person wears down, as does the printer. Until when close to the end, the only thing left is:
010101 01010
0101010101010101010
0101010101010101010
0101010101010
0101010
010
0
Then:
Humbly yours,
J
P.S. When viewing this on a mobile device or mobile browser, I recommend the landscape view.
Very clever. I couldn’t see the men on my phone. Cool way to try to understand complexities.
That’s why i suggested in the P.S. to turn your mobile device sideways. It worked that way.