PrettySquareGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,003
- Location
- New England
Thanks to everyone else again for your suggestions and experiences.
Thing is ... some here in this forum me included have the past very close to their hearts, it permeates everything, everyday, every time, the past is the present. In my case, I know, it is.
Yes, I can relate to that.
Well young lady you're sounding a little more cheerful than you were earlier I hope this is true and like I've said earlier we may not be able to actually do anything in the physical sense for you but it's always nice to have someone to listen once in a while,wishing you all the best.
I've been into things vintage since college (the late 70s-early '80s). On the day before finals week in my senior year, I threw a huge "last party of the semester" blowout and invited everyone in my department (theatre-dance). The place was packed and while we played plenty of then-contemporary music, I also threw on some Glenn Miller for a while. Everyone loved it.
My point being, you may be able to win over some converts if you encourage them. Throw a vintage party (and be patient with their initially weak attempts to pull off the look) with great vintage music or even throw a regular party and sneak in some swing music (or the music you prefer). I'll bet you'd find people are open to such new-old experiences.
Until this past August, I always had trouble fitting in. I mean, I like most of my neighbours, but some of them I just don't click with. There are always awkward silences because we intimidate each other. I think they might not know what so talk to me about because my interests are so specialized. I don't want them to be this way, but I seem to have that effect on people and I hate it!
In August I went to a "rockabilly" bar that was 10 minutes from my house and I now have a great group of friends that I really should have known all along. The band leader Drew Nugent from Philadelphia is part of this crowd and I can sit there and talk to him about 20s and 30s music for long stretches of time. No awkward silences. And he KNOWS what I'm talking about...even if it's the most obscure thing I can think of! Then we sing it. I don't think I've ever held such a conversation with a live person before lol
I never knew such a group existed in Philadelphia. They welcomed me and my husband with open arms -- even asking us why it took this long for all of us to meet! There's never a dull, quiet, or awkward moment with these people. They range in age from late 20s to early 40s. They range from the greaser-est rockabilly car-club guys to the 1930s-style dandies. I'm somewhere in the middle. My life has been changed because of them and I don't feel so lonely anymore.
I know what it is like to be all alone in your interests/lifestyle and having other people be intimidated by it or not into it (no outlet of conversation). Maybe take a chance with something if there is something remotely vintage near you?
I've had some wonderful experiences volunteering with the elderly.
So maybe an appreciation for old fashioned values is something we are born with? [huh] But at the same time, people have to be exposed to them also. So part of it must be environment.Thanks. I've had parties in my house which naturally were vintage. People have a great time and can appreciate my vintage home, but in the way one enjoys a museum. I've never had any converts.
Also, I've also gotten the feeling that others feel my home is a museum or something. And it's not that I even try to replicate a single time period.
I've gotten this occasionally too, and my usual response is "if it was a museum, you'd have been charged admission at the door." I don't get it often, though -- I'm extremely selective about the people I have over, and those who feel like it's an invitation to crack wise don't get a second chance.
The key, I think, is not treating the place like a museum yourself. My furniture is threadbare where old furniture is threadbare, I don't have a coronary if somebody sets a drink down on the coffee table without using a coaster, I don't insist people take their shoes off to avoid marring the floor or staining the rug: they can't do any damage four generations of cats haven't already done. If your house feels like a *home,* not a movie set or a museum display, people will usually respond accordingly.