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Past and future

JRI's picture

I'm 80 but have had two glimpses of the future lately.  My grandson showed up with his Tesla and took me for a ride where I was terrified by him not driving the car.  It even parked itself!  Then, we ate at a restaurant where a robot brought our food.  Heaven only knows what the future will bring.

I thought back to some of the "new" things I saw in my life.  As a 4yo, a neighbor babysat me while Mom worked.  One day, her husband brought home an electric toaster.  It was magic!  Put in bread and it toasts by itself!  We went through a whole loaf.  I often played with the boy next door whose family had a tv, we didn't.  The programming came on at noon so we sat there staring at the test pattern til it began.  The high point of the day was Howdy Doody at 3.

Fitted sheets were a miracle.  Who would have thought?  Conditioner was a hair revolution.  I didn't have to clean it up but I remember the coal man delivering.  The housewives must have been so grateful when gas heat came in.  No-iron fabrics - they've saved hours and hours of precious time.  Mom ironed her sheets on a wrangle, a machine with a large rotating cylinder.  I did plenty of ironing in my day - thank goodness that's over.

I guess every generation experiences the changes.  I often think about my grandparents, they saw indoor plumbing become standard.  They were raised with horses and saw the whole car revolution.

I just wonder what all the future will bring, you guys will see it all.

 

Comments

JRI's picture

I dont want to go back.  Washing clothes by hand, hanging them on a line in all kinds of weather......

thinkthrice's picture

Starching shirts and leaving them in the icebox before ironing them.  I don't miss that.   I still hang clothes on the line in the summer though. 

thinkthrice's picture

Kids were too busy helping the family and were expected to instead of being selfish and entitled. 

AlmostGone834's picture

Yup. I'm tired of the new way of parenting. I'm tired of technology and being connected 24/7. I want to wait for letters in the mail. I want the slower pace of life (even if it's harder). I want the quiet of book reading at night or even a radio, not the latest trashy 500in Black Friday trample special TV reality show blaring. I want picnics, and porches and snapping green beans and making pies. I want stores closed on holidays and handmade things (less commercialization). I want kids who helped out, played outside and respected their elders. I want people who actually know how to fix things. I want things made from real wood, not particle board. Etc etc etc etc etc.

I know there was a lot wrong with the old days and you can probably make a list just as long against my argument but I can't help but think of the line from the Shawshank Redemption:

"The world went and got itself in a big damn hurry" 

I feel like that guy.

thinkthrice's picture

I like the 1st of May when my asparagus garden starts producing, then June the strawberries, then July when cherries get picked, then the explosion of fruit through the end of August,  buying garlic in bulk early September to last through winter.   Picking pumpkins in October to make pie out of and decorating for Autumn.   Used to ice skate and go sledding in the winter.

I will say I"m not too fond anymore of splitting and stacking wood for the two woodstoves.  Now that I'm 64, Chef still expects me to haul 200 lbs of firewood on an ice sled a half an acre to be restacked on the indoor wood rack everyday.

If I don't wear my crampons on my Sorels which can cause snow clumps, I fall on my tuchus  which isn't good at this age.

StepUltimate's picture

100% share your sentiments, AlmostGone. 

CajunMom's picture

I've seen a few things, too! I remember getting our first hair dryer. A Vidal Sassoon that was brown and shapped like a brush. The kids were not allowed to use it. LOL

Mobil Phones: I went from a bag phone to a flip phone to a Black Berry...

Skype/Facetime: Whoa! George Jetson was right!!! 

Future: DH and i were just discussing the Tesla and future of self driving cars. I'm not there yet. I need to be in control. LOL I wonder what space travel will be like for our kids?? 

BUT I am in agreement with AlmostGone:

"The world went and got itself in a big damn hurry" 

Seriously, we need to slow down and enjoy this short life we get. That's a goal for me in 2025. Slow down and smell the roses.

Rags's picture

The first TRS 90 personal computer, the Commodore 64. The advent of the PDA.  My first TI scientific calculator. Then my monster geek HP-48SX RPN programmable scientific calculator. I remember how excited I was when my parents bought their first vehicle with A/C.  Doubly excited considering I grew up in and we lived in Saudi Arabia before buying their first Suburban in the late 70s my parents had soft top Toyota Land Cruisers.  Our road/camping trips were journeys through Dante's Inferno and all 9 circles of hell.  Actually it just was what it was and made many incredible memories.

TV was a single channel.  Blacked out with black Sharpie when anyone kissed or women had on short sleeves or shorter skirts.  All magazines were sensored, particularly the photos, though also a notable amount of the print.

Digital watches. The red LED Texas Instruments plastic watches were magic.  And pocket calculators.  I was just learning how to use a slide rule when the school shifted to calculators.  Touch dial phones replacing rotary dial.

Garage door remotes.  I too did the bag phone, to flip phone, to Blackberry transition.

End of service is not IMHO advancement. Give me a human who understands customer service over self service, robot servers, or self driving anything.  I truly hope that someone who is catastrophically injured by that crap owns all of those companies.  As an Engineer this may seem bass ackwards. However, the devolution of intellectual rigor as cheat technologies have propagated makes me sad for our future as a species.  

Certainly some stuff is interesting and intriguing.  So much of it is a spiral down the progression of mind killing idiocy.

IMHO of course.

Though I will say if Rosey the Robot maid from the Jetson's were to show up, with her robot Chef partner I could get on board with that.

Kids need to be firmly versed in the basics and know it inside out, upside down, and backwards.  The 3 "Rs" and the S,  Reading, (w)Riting, (a)Rithmetic, Science each and every semester.   All updated for the most current advances of course.  Add history (World and US), and home economics (check book balancing, budgeting, etc,,,) and no diplomas without standards based confirmation of competence in the basics of each class. No pass, no diploma. Add electives for some number of credit hours to deal with the arts, etc...  Not to forget PE.  Requiring competence confirmation in each and every class to get the credit.  IMHO of course.