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Your Most Disturbing Realizations

Messages
12,487
Location
Germany
In the year 2065, I will be 81 years old and my Kappel-typewriter from Chemnitz, Saxony will be 133 years.

Then, we both can take place in your famous Smithsonian-Institute, like Zefraim Cochrane's "warp-ship". ;)
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
24,796
Location
London, UK
Mn. 24/7 new channels must have seemed like a great idea, and certainly they can be when something major kicks off, but.... as with television in general, it seems, 'more' doesn't always mean 'better'.
 

Stanley Doble

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,808
Location
Cobourg
Don't know if it's disturbing but I notice when I read the news or watch it on TV the world keeps getting worse and worst. But when I look at my own life things keep getting better and better.
It also occurs to me that every day they discover new things that are bad for you, yet people keep living longer and longer.
 

Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
[QUOTE="AmateisGal, post: 2006389, member: 34.]...and has no idea what a set of encyclopedias is.

That's one that hits really hard for me. I *loved* the encyclopedia as a kid -- I'd sit leafing thru it for hours, even when I was supposed to be doing something else. There was nothing better for learning about the world and everything in it -- every page was something new that you'd never heard of before.

I suppose you can find that on the internet today, but there's way too many things I've come across online that I wish I'd never heard of. And the tactile pleasure of the encyclopedia volumes themselves is something you'll never get from a computer. Our school had a set of the World Book which featured transparent celluoid pages that showed the various organs and arrangements of the human body, and each page you'd turn would peel back a layer of the body so you could get a sense of how it all fit together. I thought that was the most fascinating thing I'd ever seen.

I still have my set of the Britannica, 1937 "Coronation Edition," and I still use it, read it, and enjoy it.[/QUOTE]

I consult my 1984 Britannica often. My high school library had a much older set, and the leathery smell of the volumes was heady and intriguing, as if the people who bound them had put in a special effort to make using them memorable for us.
 
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Benzadmiral

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,815
Location
The Swamp
When I was thirteen years old, they were tearing down an old neighborhood grocery store next to my grandparents' house, and I enjoyed poking around in the rubble. Among the things I found were several magazines dating between 1930 and 1938 -- and I marveled at the fact that some of them were *over forty years old." Next year will mark the fortieth anniversary of my finding them. Oooweee.

My mother had some Yank magazines from the war years that I discovered as a kid. At that point they were some 20 years old, which seemed ancient to me at the time. It's now been about 50 years since I thought that -- 2.5 times as old as the issues were back then.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,358
Location
New Forest
It also occurs to me that every day they discover new things that are bad for you, yet people keep living longer and longer.
Yep, just recently red meat has been public enemy number one. Doesn't seem to have dented the sales at fast food outlets.
We get endlessly harangued about recycling, a good thing when you realise that the planet's resources are finite, but for goodness sake, does everything have to be marked up when it's been recycled?
Today, whilst doing the shop for groceries and household items, my wife texts me: "We need some toilet tissue," she reminds me. No problem, well not until the purchase. "100% recycled," it proclaimed on the packet. Well, I don't know about you, but the image that conjured up, was of some poor little minion, down at the sewage treatment plant, laboriously sifting out used toilet tissue, washing it, hanging it out to dry and finally ironing it before it's repackaged ready for................................................. are some of you eating? Sorry.
 
Messages
10,603
Location
My mother's basement
I realized today that I have been alive during the administrations of fully one-quarter of all U.S. presidents, starting with FDR.

Fully one-quarter with two to spare. If I'm counting right, you've been alive through 13 of the 44 U.S. presidencies, including the current one.
 

F. J.

One of the Regulars
Messages
221
Location
The Magnolia State
The weirdness works the other way, too. When I read that actress Oona Chaplin was Charlie Chaplin's granddaughter I thought surely this must be a mistake, they must mean great- or even great-great granddaughter. But it's true. Charlie was born in 1889 and Oona was born in 1987, when he would have been 98, had he lived. He married Oona O'Neil late in life, and their son likewise married late. Only two generations from the top silent star to the "Game of Thrones" actress.

That reminds me of John Tyler, who served as President in the early 1840's. He was born during the Washington administration and died before the end of the Civil War, but he has living grandchildren!
He remarried after his first wife died and begat children in his old age, and one of his sons did the same. He had his son Lyon Gardiner Tyler at 63, who in turn was 71 when his son Lyon Gardiner Tyler, Jr., was born, and had Harrison Ruffin Tyler at age 75.
 

F. J.

One of the Regulars
Messages
221
Location
The Magnolia State
[...]
I *loved* the encyclopedia as a kid -- I'd sit leafing thru it for hours, even when I was supposed to be doing something else. There was nothing better for learning about the world and everything in it -- every page was something new that you'd never heard of before.
[...]

I did the same whenever I was at my grandmother’s house as a kid, as she had a World Book set from 1970. Unfortunately, she got rid of it, but I still have the two-volume dictionary and atlas.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,358
Location
New Forest
Thank you for using the term, English, Lizzie. Whenever you look up something English these days, the information always refers to English as British. We have only been Brits since: The Acts of Union 1707. Wiki states that our kingdoms originated around AD 400. That coincides with the fall of the Roman Empire.
Wiki should have turned around, when they photographed our Houses of Parliament, if they had done so, they would have seen a statue of Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni, circa AD 61.
 

MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
Remembering the introduction of cable tv "converters", particularly those that came with the long-wire-attached channel changing boxes.

We had both kinds of tv - VHF AND UHF.

(up to) 12 of each!
 

hottoddy

New in Town
Messages
17
Location
Oregon (Portland area)
Fun thread. One set of my great grandparents emigrated into the US from Denmark in the late 1800s. My grandparents on that side were born in 1914.

I also saw Jaws and Star Wars at the cinema. Jaws kept us kids outta the ocean the whole summer. Kids today think I'm ancient because I was alive before the moon landings. Obscure trivia: I attended a taping of Good Times; saw both Guns-n-Roses and Bon Jovi live before they were famous at small venues.
 
Messages
16,882
Location
New York City
Fun thread. One set of my great grandparents emigrated into the US from Denmark in the late 1800s. My grandparents on that side were born in 1914.

I also saw Jaws and Star Wars at the cinema. Jaws kept us kids outta the ocean the whole summer. Kids today think I'm ancient because I was alive before the moon landings. Obscure trivia: I attended a taping of Good Times; saw both Guns-n-Roses and Bon Jovi live before they were famous at small venues.

Might be a separate thread here - I saw Huey Lewis and the News before "Sports" exploded and Sheryl Crow before "Tuesday Night Music Club." GNR is the only real, true Rock band to come out of the '80s.
 

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