Edward
Bartender
- Messages
- 25,116
- Location
- London, UK
Among the great benefits of living in one house for many years is having on hand all those little odds and ends which you’ve acquired over those years.
Baling wire, picture wire, speaker wire, electrical wire, wire nuts, power strips, wall anchors, paint, paint brushes, paint rollers, paint sprayer, tape (in many varieties), tape measures, tools, nuts and bolts and screws and nails. Et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
I’m not much or a handyman, nor a mechanic. But much of what needs fixing or replacing around the house doesn’t require specialized skills or equipment. And I have a two-car garage (I’m an American suburbanite, so that’s almost a birthright) and two garden sheds and a utility room in the basement. So it isn’t that all that stuff is in my way. In some ways, it’s better than money in the bank.
Two sheds? Are you related to this guy?
I am still having difficulty accessing FL. It is taking a very long time to load. Any updates about solving this problem?
Still working on the root cause, I think - though it seems to be working faster for most folks now?
^^^^^
As I’m sure I’ve mentioned before, the people of the “Greatest Generation” I knew well enough to say I knew, rarely pined for how things were when they were young. Perhaps misty-eyed nostalgia is a luxury reserved for those who have never known true hardship.
I think we've spoken about this before, but I suspect a lot of unhealthy nostalgia of the "the past was perfect, and everything turned to doo doo in year X" is one of two things. Either 'Golden Age Thinking" - wherein the perfect era was typically before the speaker's birth (see Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris for a perfect take-down of this), or what I call 'Tom Buchanan Syndrome', where the individual feels a specific period of their life was perfect, and they're forever trying to get back to that. I've been very lucky so far, I think, that I've felt life has been on an upward trajectory - the bonus, I suppose, of growing into the grumpy old man I've been since I was about fourteen.
Growing up pre-internet, we were always encouraged to, look it up. Most lending libraries had a reference library annex. I haven't seen a reference library for years. Not much need I guess, but although the internet has made research easier, I do take Lizzie's point, it's not all Gospel truth.
There's a lot to be said for the plurality of content we have nowadays, though sadly quality of content has not kept up with the quantity, especially online. It sure does pay to fact check the internet!
Remember the 90s, when people still thought (influenced by Hollywood), that all Tarantulas are deadly monsters??
Althought, in old Germany, we always had the old saying "Like stung by a Tarantula", NOT "Like killed by a Tarantula".
Sure, Black Widow and others are a different story, but Tarantulas were built up into monsters, for whatever reason.
T Same as how Great Whites get so much bad press post Jaws, or how Rottweillers are perceived because of The Omen. The usual Hollywood thing.... if it looks cool....
Possibly also the fact that as well as looking impressive, tarantulas aren't really deadly - important back in the day when they couldn't just CGI it in, and to get a close-up that looked realistic, they had to have the real thing...