• who8mydamnoreos@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    One thing I’ve learned about history is that it was always way more colorful than it was presented. Classical era was not stark white, medieval was not muddy brown. They all popped with color and so did your pops.

    • bouh@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Well, costumes nowadays are definitely black and white. And since the 19th century isn’t it a bit less colorful overall?

      Older than that and I 100% agree, especially when colors would show how wealthy you are.

      • who8mydamnoreos@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Once again our perception of the 19th and 20th century are altered by the mediums which we experience them. Early photography, black and white movies of smoggy industrial districts. However if you witnessed a parade or a any other part of town it would be quite colorful.

  • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’m fifty.

    • Thinking about getting my tattoos refreshed
    • Snowboard
    • Surf
    • Skateboard
    • Play videogames
    • Play tabletop games
    • Play a Tim Henson guitar
    • Enjoy current music not just what was released before the year 2005.
    • Still wear tees, shorts (cargo or board, not golf), and skate shoes
    • Comfortable wearing gender non-conforming clothes because women’s linen capris, oversized knitted sweaters, etc are cozy and comfortable as fuck.
    • Enjoy and appreciate weird ass Gen-Z humor
    • Can carry a conversation with a 16 year old in their native dialect

    When I was younger, I was terrified that one day I would wake up and be my father or some other stuffy old man that complains about “kids these days”. I’m super glad that I never turned into that guy and remain my 22 year old self in my mind. That said, I picked up guitar again after a fifteen year break and “kids these days” don’t know how good they have it. The quality of budget guitars is insane and the amount of free courses and music learning and creation tools is just brain melting.

    • AnthoNightShift@lemmy.caOP
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      1 year ago

      Hey, you know what they say about our generation: At the age of 10 we were 30, and now at 50 we’re still 30.

      • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Ain’t that the fucking truth.

        The life of every Gen-X kid I grew up with was eerily similar.

        Monday-Friday:

        • Wake up
        • Make your own breakfast because parents have to go to work. If eldest child, make breakfast for younger siblings. A friend and her siblings divided breakfast where each sibling was responsible for one thing. Sue eggs and bacon, Ed milk and juice, Jimmy buttered toast, Sally plates and utensils. I always thought that was cool.
        • Catch bus to and from school
        • Alone and unsupervised until dinnertime (aka, when the street lights come on)
        • Have dinner with parent(s)
        • Go to room to do homework and/or listen to music and/or spend toouch time on the phone.
        • Sleep and repeat

        Saturday & Sunday:

        • Breakfast with parents…maybe Sunday dinner. Other than that, stay out of the house so parents can enjoy their weekend.