Many years ago I had a friend out in Seattle with a connection in the city transportation department who gave us used light bulbs from the traffic signals, which were changed out on a schedule, well ahead of their expected lifespan. They were Edison base bulbs, and clear glass, and plainly more...
When I was back in Wisconsin a few months back (where I haven’t resided since 1968), I was pleased to see that the tavern a block or so up from my grandfather’s house (where I lived myself during one of my folks’s numerous separations) was still in operation, mostly unchanged except for the...
Another thing that might make little sense to youngsters these days was the observation made yesterday by David Grisman, the mandolin player of some renown, who said, on the occasion of his 78th birthday, that he was born in 45 and was 33 in 78.
Oh yes, we humans, even the celibate among us, are sexual beings, whatever expression it may take. I’ve yet to meet a person who left me with the impression that s/he didn’t wish to be sexually desirable to someone, even if s/he had no intention of taking that someone up on the matter. Just...
I’ve worn specs since age 15 or so. A cataract surgery several years ago corrected vision in my left eye such that I can legally drive without corrective lenses (although I suppose that by strictest definition that artificial implant is a corrective lens), but I wear glasses anyway, bifocals...
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There’s an overlap here with the “You know you’re getting old when … ” thread. Good enough, I say.
I’m reminded that the late Gore Vidal observed on the occasion of one of his later birthdays that among the few advantages of advancing years is increasing freedom from what he called “the...
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Regarding old cars v. new …
Much as I love old cars, new ones are superior in almost every regard, most of which our British Columbian friend already enumerated.
The features of new household appliances might make them more convenient (and really, ain’t that the entire point of our...
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Wasn’t it the industrial designer Harley Earl who coined the slightly more euphemistic phrase “dynamic obsolescence”?
Earl was the head of styling for General Motors. The “obsolescence“ he had in mind was more concerned with the aesthetics of the product than its function(s) and...
An uncle, who shuffled off at a truly advanced age a few months back, had to repeat a grade level when he was a kid.
As a teenager he went to work as an appliance repairman for a local department store. He was welcomed back there after he did his hitch in the U.S. Army. And that’s where he...
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Which brings to mind the TV repairman.
When I was a kid a new TV could cost a working man a month’s wages. Or more. And the things not infrequently needed repairs. So the fellow in the gray or green uniform would show up with his box of tools and tubes and a mirror and fiddle with the...
… you post photos of the groovy 1963-vintage Frigidaire Flair range you recently acquired, a “mod” era piece if ever there was one, and the most common comments are along the lines of “there was one like that in my grandmother’s house!”
It shows the boundaries and the years in which most of the West was acquired, and from whom. (The Natives aren’t mentioned.)
If we were taught any of the particulars of western expansion (with the exception of the Lewis & Clark Expedition) when I was a kid, it certainly left no lasting...
A junk peddler friend sold me this 1941 map for 10 bucks several years ago, if memory serves. A person who specializes in old paper tells me it’s not worth much, but I dig it anyway. If another copy exists, I’ve never seen it.
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