AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
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- 6,084
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olive bleu said:But i can't make everyone else and the world around me more closely reflect those values..and maybe that's what we really mean when we long for the past.
Well said.
olive bleu said:But i can't make everyone else and the world around me more closely reflect those values..and maybe that's what we really mean when we long for the past.
John Lofgren Monkey Boots Shinki Horsebuttt - $1,136 The classic monkey boot silhouette in an incredibly rich Shinki russet horse leather.
Grant Stone Diesel Boot Dark Olive Chromexcel - $395 Goodyear welted, Horween Chromexcel, classic good looks.
Schott 568 Vandals Jacket - $1,250 The classic Perfecto motorcycle jacket, in a very special limited-edition Schott double rider style. LizzieMaine said:The supreme irony, though, is that life for the working class today is actually quite a bit worse than it was then -- there are fewer jobs, fewer opportunities, and much more social prejudice against those who are not college-educated. I know this from first-hand experience.
Originally Posted by swinggal
I certainly have no mis-givings about how difficult the 20s, 30s and 40s were for many people. I would love to go back for a visit now and again (maybe buy lots of clothes to bring back and go to all the jazz clubs I've drooled over forever) but I would not want to stay. I like modern technology and many of todays mod cons.
The things that I wish we still had now are a better sense of community where everyone in the street knew one another, better manners, a sense of pride in how one dressed, a less wasteful society where things lasted forever and could be reused - I HATE the throw-a-way society we have now...I could go on.
The things I would not want to be a part of would be ***ism and very few rights for women and racial predjudice on a major scale. I know we still have this now but nowhere near the scale that it was.
Amy Jeanne said:As for nostalgia, I'm currently "notalgizing" the 80s. It was great, more carefree, the music was the best, and I had lots of vivid thoughts and memories the time. BUT IN REALITY I was horribly picked on, fashionably inept, insecure and so shy my parents tooK me to a shrink, and I was, uh, UGLY lol
swinggal said:The things that I wish we still had now are a better sense of community where everyone in the street knew one another, better manners, a sense of pride in how one dressed, a less wasteful society where things lasted forever and could be reused - I HATE the throw-a-way society we have now...I could go on.
Enough said, this was life in the 1950's. Oh, my nick name is LarryRalph. I missed the "h" when I signed up and I don't know how to fix it. I have 2 master degrees, but I'm still learning about computers and the internet. We didn't have that when I grew up.
Life back then was simpler, but we had a lot less.
Foofoogal said:I have lived the traditional marriage for 35 years. We have a simple technique. I take care of the inside and he takes care of the outside. lol
You know, you ain't half right on that. When I think about some of the things I've seen happen over the past two years to people I care about -- due to a great extent to certain modern attitudes and social customs -- 2010 seems like the Good Ole Days by comparison.
And I still can't stand to look at the magazines in the checkout line. I was visiting my mother today and noticed a stack of celebrity tabloids left by my sister, and all I wanted to do was cry.