vitanola
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,254
- Location
- Gopher Prairie, MI
Yes, and when Shopping Bags get together in a large group there is danger, grave danger.I meant shopping-bags.
Yes, and when Shopping Bags get together in a large group there is danger, grave danger.I meant shopping-bags.
I am drawn to cemeteries. The place where my natural father is buried, the graveyard behind a country Catholic church, tells the story of much of my genetic stock. The older graves there date from the late 1800s, and are marked with stones engraved in German. Little markers tell of those stillborn or dead in infancy.
It's endlessly fascinating.
Carl Reiner is still with us, I do believe.
More than any other movie I can think of, IAMMMMW has me seeing the world (literally --how the physical world appeared through my eyes) as it appeared in my early years. The cars, the architecture, the clothing.
And then there's the types of humor and cultural norms. The movie is very much of the period it was made.
That's not a bad idea! When I worked on WWII airplanes, we would come across messages written on the metal under inspection panels, we all got a kick out of them. Mostly, they wished the pilot or crew good luck, or they were proud to be working for the war effort. Wish we had cell phones back then, so I could have documented them!I’m seriously thinking of writing a message of some kind inside the metal
somewhere to be discovered in the future.
Not sure what I want to tell them....any ideas Lizzie ?
Getting back to disturbing realizations- I was thinking as I read this site, of how nearly all the clothes, hats, furniture etc of bygone ages was worn out, decayed, thrown out and disappeared and what we have left is a small remnant that luckily survives in good condition. Then it occurred to me that the makers and original owners are ALL dead and gone if we are talking about things from much before WW2.
...I also reflect on my ’39 & ’46 vehicles with the thought that I am merely
a care-taker until someone with the same interests comes along in the future.
I’m seriously thinking of writing a message of some kind inside the metal
somewhere to be discovered in the future.
Not sure what I want to tell them...
^^^^^
I doubt I'm alone in this increasing awareness of the temporary nature of all things. I'm always known that nothing lasts forever, that even the Earth itself didn't exist at one time, and that in some distant future it will cease to exist.
The more people you bury the harder it gets to deny your own mortality. I like preserving old stuff. I like to think that something of me will survive me. But those are just artifacts. No other person is obliged to accord those artifacts the sort of magic I ascribe to them.
On that cheery note ...
I doubt I'm alone in this increasing awareness of the temporary nature of all things. I'm always known that nothing lasts forever, that even the Earth itself didn't exist at one time, and that in some distant future it will cease to exist.
I think a lot about the workers who built my Plodge. The Canadian Chrysler plant in Windsor, where it was built, wasn't yet unionized in 1941, and Chrysler Canada was actively working to suppress the UAW organizers who were employed at the plant. They had to meet secretly to plan strategy, all the while avoiding the company goons who were trying to root them out. Whenever I work on the car myself I think about the conditions under which it was built, and I admire the courage of the workers who put it together.
A man with an idea and no way to bring it into execution is simply a daydreamer.
Without our brain and muscle, not a single wheel can turn.
I recently did jury service and realized that most of the Telephones in the building had been removed.
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Seems really hard to find a phone booth these days. Another sign of the times.