Life Without the Internet – Can We Survive??
Imagine you are writing an important email and suddenly your internet stops working. Sounds stressed? Right? In this hyper-connected world, life without the internet feels almost impossible. From internet banking, virtual meetings, online classes, scrolling through phones, and food delivery apps, the internet has become a part of our daily life. For students in business schools like me, the internet is not merely a utility; it’s essential to our learning. As a B-School student, I learn new things every day from words to new topics, I use the internet. It’s also used for relationship building and future opportunities. But the question remains: can we truly survive without the internet?
If we go back around 20-30 years, people did manage without the internet. They depended on face-to-face communication, handwritten letters, fax machines, newspapers, libraries, books, and much more. Businesses worked on paperwork and phone calls, so yeah!!! Survival clearly is possible but not without a drastic lifestyle change.
As we are now in the year 2025, we can’t fully live without the internet. The sudden absence of the internet would have severe impacts, and in one way or another, it did play an important part. Education would be hit hard online learning, classes, research, and working together online would stop. Online collaboration would come to a halt. The corporate world would face communication breakdowns and productivity loss. Even basic services like banking and ticket bookings would get delayed. The convenience we have grown up with would be gone.
On the flip side, things look different. A day without the internet would bring genuine human interaction. The world would run at a slower pace, reduce screen addiction, fake social validation, and fake information overload. People would spend more time together, start being mindful, read books, simply enjoy nature, and much more.
So yes, we can survive without the internet, but it would take a mindset shift and strong adaptability. It is true that the internet makes our life easier and comes with lots of benefits. The internet has empowered us, but it shouldn’t control us. Real survival lies in our ability to balance the digital and the real world.