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Thread: Born in the wrong decade?
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02-17-2006, 05:17 AM #1
Born in the wrong decade?
Do you ever feel like you were born in the wrong decade???
I am 27 and I like country music, blues, cowboy boots, cowboy hats, traditional values, guns, slow relaxing shaves, old muscle cars, etc...
I feel like I was born at least 40 - 60 years to late...is it just me...do some of you feel like you were born to early or to late??
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02-17-2006, 05:50 AM #2
I'm now shaving with a straight, writing with a fountain pen...yeah, sometimes it does feel that way. However, I don't want to give up computers, email, airline travel (which is faster now) and many other modern things. I'll just enjoy the best of both worlds.
RT
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02-17-2006, 03:17 PM #3
Caught Me
Verily, indeed! But being something of a Ludite or a Classicist perhaps, isn't all that bad. I'm free from 'conventional wisdoms' which can fail because they tend not to learn the lessons of history from time to time. I'm just a little old fashioned is all.
X
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02-17-2006, 03:31 PM #4
For me I hate throwing things out. We have become a disposable society hense we have trash up the wazzo. This is also something I can pass down to my son.
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02-17-2006, 04:08 PM #5
Wrong Decade? Wrong century...
Everything has been in decline since the invention of smokeless powder. We have the French to thank for that.
Regards &C
LG Roy
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02-17-2006, 04:52 PM #6
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- May 2005
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- Sanford, North Carolina
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Thanked: 1I still want to be a mountain man, can you imagine seeing the rockies for the first time, no people except indians. Your survival depending on your wits and strength, not someone elses. Life was short back then, but it was a full life. No more frontiers to explore. Except space, and you have to be a rocket scientist to do that.
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02-17-2006, 05:24 PM #7Originally Posted by Rob
RT
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02-17-2006, 05:43 PM #8
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- May 2005
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Thanked: 1Originally Posted by rtaylor61
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02-17-2006, 06:34 PM #9
I'm with RT on this one. I shave with a staight, write with a fountain pen but would not give up internet, electricity, cell phones, cars, planes, MRI, anesthetic, dental care, etc.
I would not want to sweat bullets everytime one of my kids sneezed because bloodletting and prayer were the only remedies.
Heck, without internet I would most likely not even be shaving with a straight, restoring razors or making custom scales. Even voicing your opinion 20 years ago would only be possible to nearby individuals who couldn't care less about your weird interests for sharp things.
Today's construction feats are spectacular, are pushing the engineering capabilities and no less ingenious for the current technology level. Yet, we don't remark on them because we are accustomed to technological mirracles, instead we marvel at the historcal seven wonders of the world.
Yes, the old stuff has its appeal and feeling of continuity, but the new stuff adds its own value. I think we just take the new for granted and don't give it the true appreciation it deserves. Same as straight razors were treated in their heyday. My father told me he shaved with a straight when he was yound and it was about the only option in old USSR. Now, he does not miss it.
I, peronally, love the old and the new.
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02-17-2006, 06:43 PM #10
- Join Date
- Nov 2005
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- Aptos, CA
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- 208
Thanked: 15I'm with RT and Vladsch on this one. A little old, a little new. Keep what's good and throw out the rest....