My first grade daughter recently accompanied me to my grandfather's house to help clean it out. He had the strangest thing hanging on his wall. It had a long, curly cord, a clunky handset, and some kind of rotary dial on it. My daughter had no idea what it was.
This was her introduction to a rotary dial telephone.
Telephones have come a long way since I was born in the 70's, but the way some of us answer them has not. When my parent's cell phones ring, they have to answer it. They seem to be compelled by some unseen force to answer that call, even if they don't want to talk to the person. They know they have voicemail and people can leave a message. They know who is calling via caller ID. Generally, they know whether or not it is going to be an earth shattering phone call. But something compels them to answer the phone. Course I have seen this with people younger than me also that are *way *too involved in their phones, so much so that they interrupt family time to answer everything, but that is another post.
I screen my calls, I admit it. If I am busy with my kids, eating dinner, or don't know the phone number, I don't answer it. I have come to see caller id as a useful, time saving tool. If it is my child's school, I answer it. If it is an unknown number, then it is probably someone I don't want to talk to anyway. Caller ID let's me focus needed time on my family without solicitors and other people interrupting me.
So why the difference in the generations? My theory is that during my parents time and even when I was a child, you didn't know who was calling. You couldn't get messages. Anyone calling you had an important reason, in theory. You had to answer that phone call or you might miss something important. Old habits die hard. How about you, fellow Geeks? Have you noticed this among your parents as well? Is it a generational disconnect or just an old habit?