
Probably buys them a few hours over 90 years.
I haven't discarded the bad stuff and I still get waves of nostalgia. I heard something about nostalgia recently. It was to do with learning I think. Maybe something to do with neurons. I might get back to you. If I remember I'll go search it.Some Schmo wrote: ↑Wed May 15, 2024 7:48 pmI listened to someone (I really wish I could remember the reference) who was saying that studies show the "nostalgia of the good old days" happens to everyone who ages. Every generation feels like they came from a better time (usually when they were younger and knew a lot less about what was happening in the world), when in reality, we remember what we liked and discard most of the bad stuff, never being made aware of most of it, giving us an overall picture of a better time.Doctor Steuss wrote: ↑Wed May 15, 2024 4:03 pmThe glow of the "good ole days" tends to cloud how we look at our current time.
That's the only reason the slogan "Make America Great Again" works for some people, like America was once a better place to live overall. In some ways it may have been better for certain people, but it's a much better place to live for a lot more people than it used to be.