No Gadgets for These Guys

What if you lived in a world in which you would never program a DVR, take a call on a cell phone, use a computer, send a FAX, drive a car, watch TV, or heat a frozen dinner in a microwave oven? Can you imagine it? Can you imagine it even a little? I can’t. It’s unthinkable. But the thousands of Amish people who live in Holmes County, Ohio, live in this type of world all their lives, and so far as I know, there isn’t one of them who regrets it.

It’s not that they don’t know about our modern “gadgets” as they call them, and it’s not that they can’t afford such conveniences. Rather, they have rejected them knowingly. They have considered the English lifestyle, and except in cases where one of them has left their Amish sect, they have all decided that they would rather live without the modern conveniences that we all take for granted. They reject the appliances that we English all consider essential.

So, rather than using electric ovens and microwaves, the Amish cook on elaborate wood stoves, available even today at stores like Lehman’s Hardware in Kidron, Ohio. Rather than drive cars, the Amish use horse and buggy transportation. Rather than buying life insurance or long-term care insurance, the Amish take care of their older relatives right on the farm where they grew up.

Quite a few Amish folk have explained to me that all we “English” really have is our gadgets. They advise that if we would examine our lives, we will surely discover that the only advantages we have over the Amish are the modern gadgets that we use.

A man and his three sons on a wagon

So the father and three sons in this picture know that they will never own a car, rely on a computer, carry a credit card, or program a DVR. They know that they will never struggle through the security checkpoints in an airport, backup all their documents on a remote location, pay someone else to safeguard their identity, or spend their first hour at work checking emails. Starting to get the picture? Right. Maybe they do have it all figured out.

The three sons on this wagon were headed with their father that day to a small grocery store at Becks Mills, in the Doughty Valley of Holmes County, Ohio. That’s a little place few English even know about. It’s worth the drive, but stop at the County Engineer’s office (across from the courthouse in Millersburg) to get a map of Holmes County. You’d need that to find Becks Mills. You might even need the map to find your way back out of the Doughty Valley, once you find it. But I promise you, once you’ve been there, you’ll wonder if you really do need all those gadgets in your life. You do, surely, and I do too, but you’ll wonder. You’ll wonder what life would be like if your days were no more complicated than a wagon ride with father, to the grocery store down the lane.

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2 Responses to “No Gadgets for These Guys”

  1. » helen wright says:

    I just got your book called [Blood Of The Prodigal] at a yard sale and read it in a day.I loved it and I would like to know where I could buy all your Amish mysteries.I live in Mansfield and I like to read mysteries that are easy to read and close to home. Thank you for writing good clean mysteries.Your new reader Mrs.Helen Wright

  2. » Paul Gaus says:

    Thank you, Helen, for the compliment. They sell my mysteries at Barnes and Noble in Mansfield, Ohio, and at most Barnes and Noble stores around the country. Any bookstore can order them easily, so just ask for the Ohio Amish Mysteries. There are six of them in print (the latest one came out in July this year), and I am working on another.

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