PrettySquareGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,003
- Location
- New England
This, hands down, is the single best comment ever posted in the history of the Lounge.
Coming from YOU, that's a real honor! Thanks.
This, hands down, is the single best comment ever posted in the history of the Lounge.
To the fellow who said he calls himself "old man," I call myself an "old lady" despite the pejorative and unsexy connotations for a woman in 2012.
Growing up, old man/ old woman referred to your married partner, if you'd been married for a period of time and gotten comfortable as partners. My father and mother have referred to each other this way for YEARS, even when they looked in their 20s. Is this not common? To be honest, the only other time I've heard "old man" in that connotation is in the Joni Mitchell song.
When I was growing up we had old ladies, such as PSG describes, and old bags. I'm more of an old bag myself -- someone who stays up half the night yelling at the Red Sox, calls the town office to complain about that halfwit snowplow driver who keeps filling in the driveway, and threatens grievous bodily on any little kids who shoot BB guns at her birdfeeder.
Sad though it may sound, if you wait five years or so, 2012 won't seem quite so bad!
Yes, I'm familiar with that usage, but when I use it on myself I mean a literal old lady as far as eating early bird specials, collecting doilies, watching Lawrence Welk while eating dinner on TV trays, fussing over details in my home, going to bed early, being old school, etc.
This made me feel like an old man, as I'm sitting with my pipe and slippers listening to Lawrence Welk on Vinyl lol
This made me feel like an old man, as I'm sitting with my pipe and slippers listening to Lawrence Welk on Vinyl lol
we find the present tense and the past perfect?
"At a writing forum, I was trying to explain about this kooky subculture of ours but was hard-pressed for one good word to describe it."
As it is a writing forum perhaps they would understand if you explained that we find the present tense and the past perfect?
And that goes all the way back to the points raised in the very beginning of the thread -- there's no point in trying to come up with an umbrella term covering *all* "retro people," because it's not in any way a unified movement with common values and common goals. All any of us can do is try to define our own particular niches, and that was the only purpose of this particular thread.
Hi Stanley
I think part of your problem is that it's not "kooky subculture of ours", it's actually "kooky subcultures of ours. We have the hat boys who like fedoras, we have the retro work-wear group, the vintage lifestyle group, the safari group, the pin-ups, and the vintage women's clothing group(s?) at least. Forgive me if I left somebody out. PERSONALLY, I ended up here looking up Safari or bush jacket, now I own like 10 hats.
One word: [huh]
Later
I've heard geek, nerd, dork and some that were down right rude. It's nice to see that there are actually considerate ways to address our interests.
Tom D.