• @[email protected]
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    202 years ago

    The immense shock of realizing that I am realistically over a third of the way through my life.

  • @[email protected]
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    912 years ago

    How fast time passes. Years pass very quickly now and the view of the end is approaching faster than I would like.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      You didn’t ask for advice, but please consider journaling or writing a personal blog. I find that the time passes faster because I have fewer novel experiences as I get older. If I put a dedicated effort into remembering what was unique about my recent days, it feels like I live more of them.

      • @[email protected]
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        62 years ago

        Yeah I’m guessing this has to be why time feels to pass faster. When you’re growing, there are so many milestones and rapid changes from ages 0 to maybe 22. Beyond that, everything is the same until you die. That’s an interesting way to make it longer.

    • deadcatbounce
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      82 years ago

      Each time period (week, year etc) is a smaller proportion of your life.

      Anything that happened when I was much younger can’t be resolved easily to the nearest year, unless I can identify a specific immutable event like a specific birthday.

      • @[email protected]
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        12 years ago

        I’ve found making playlists based on music releases from each year helps with this… for me I can almost immediately remember a year or time period just by hearing a song

        • deadcatbounce
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          12 years ago

          Quite a few tracks - does one say that anymore? - I am convinced are 1980s are actually 1990s. I’m Gen X so I should be getting that distinction right!

          • @[email protected]
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            12 years ago

            You can just use the songs you listened to most in a given year too. Assuming you’re mainly listening to old music, my original suggestion probably won’t work.

    • @[email protected]
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      132 years ago

      My friends a GP in the UK and they’ve said there’s been an increasing amount of people come in for “tiredness”.

      It’s probably more about the state of this world rather than your age

      • @[email protected]
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        122 years ago

        Yeah you’re not wrong.

        I feel like I can’t get ahead. Always running. Hell, I even do well for myself, good job and income. There’s always “just one more [X]”. And then we die.

  • @[email protected]
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    392 years ago

    I’ve only gotten MORE healthy and strong.

    My sex drive hasn’t gone down like media tells me

    Retirement is a fantasy

    When I look at homeless people I think 'that could be me in 4 months if I miss 2 weeks of work.

    • @[email protected]
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      152 years ago

      My ‘resolution’ this year was to be ruder to people. I’ve spent my whole adult life feeling obliged to be chronically nice and polite at all times. It’s definitely the right position to take generally but sometimes a little bit of rudeness is warranted. I don’t have to let old people at the bus stop talk at me rather than with me; I can tell them to fuck off if they’re being bigoted or obnoxious. I don’t have to let the pharmacist condescend to me when I was right about my prescription being ready; I can say ‘I told you so’, no matter how childish it might be.

      The I-don’t-give-a-fuck attitude has done wonders for my mental health

      • guldukat
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        42 years ago

        Same. If I hear you say out loud some anti-lgbtq crap you read on Facebook I’m calling you out, and I don’t need to be a prick about it, but condescension goes a long way.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      I’ve acquired this recently and it’s made work a lot easier to deal with.

      I’ve realised nobody ever gets fired in the company I work in (and I would 100% take the severance package if offered redundancy). I’ve spent 8 years being a team player, giving extra hours for nothing, and becoming one of the most knowledgeable people in the world for our system, only to be given a middle finger of a raise after a 6month fight (in which I was told almost immediately they’d take care of me and I’d be happy with it.

      Well. Fuck them and their 7.5%.

      Ill take the minimal amount of extra cash but as far as I’m concerned that’s SOME of my back pay for the efforts over the last 8 years. I am putting 10% effort into my job and 90% into finding a new one now (which will come with another 5% for a sideways move anyway).

      A few years ago I wouldn’t be able to stop myself trying to please everyone even after all that, it’s so refreshing being able to turn off that switch which says I should care about my job. All it took was nearly a decade of mistreatment before realising they didn’t give a shit about me…

  • @[email protected]
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    452 years ago

    How “not old” everything is. I’m not old, but when I was young I thought people my age were at the general end of one’s life. People also are surprisingly clueless.

    • @[email protected]
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      272 years ago

      Same idea but in, perhaps, a different sense:

      When I was young, landing on the moon and the US war with Vietnam were all “in the past” and when I was young everything “in the past” had equal weighting and distance from my existence.

      As I get older, I look back on things with the perspective of equidistance, time-wise, from my birth (or sometimes from ~adulthood) and events within that ever growing range start feeling like “not that long ago”

      • The Vietnam war ended only 3 years before I was born!
      • Apollo 11 was less than a decade before I was born. I’ve experienced that 9 year timespan three times in conscious memory and five times in my life.
      • Even WWII is closer to my birth than I am.
      • Heck, even the Great Depression was just starting to recover.

      The older I get, the more recent everything seems.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 years ago

        I relate very much with you on this comment.

        It’s bizarre to me these days to really realize and contemplate how close events like WW2, Kennedy’s assassination, the moon landing, Woodstock, etcetera actually all were to my birth.

        But as a child and even into my early 20s most of those events felt like practically an eternity away.

        It really puts it into perspective when I think about the fact that I moved out of my parents’ home and started working full time over 30 years ago…

        First saw the Grateful Dead in concert over 30 years ago… They’d already been performing for over 25 years at that point and seemed like such a massive juggernaut that had just sort of always been around.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        when I was young everything “in the past” had equal weighting and distance from my existence.

        As a young person I relate to this feeling. Sometimes I forget how close to my birth some historical events were. Like, 9/11 was just a couple years before my birth, and the end of the USSR was closer to my birth than I am (and by quite a margin). Which… to me, the USSR feels very much “in the past”.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    How it makes me understand more and more of my parents’ actions and opinions that I questioned or condemned when I was younger. So maybe even…becoming more conservative in a way.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      How old are you? I feel like I started off being such an edge lord on the internet, and now at 30 I’ve never felt more aligned with left leaning ideologies. My father was pretty left leaning as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        32 years ago

        I’m 32. Maybe conservative was not the right word to use. I still consider myself on the left side of the political spectrum (even outside of the US). But every now and then I catch myself in situations, where I would have been a lot more idealistic some years ago. Now there are often thoughts like ‘Well, there have to be compromises’. But you made a great point. The shift you go through while growing older may definitely depend on your parents’ political views, too.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 years ago

    This hit me more than a decade ago but the realization that nobody really knows what they’re doing. Most people wing it their entire lives.

    • Random Dent
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      292 years ago

      I was watching Peep Show recently and at one point Mark says “The world’s just people walking around, going in to rooms and saying things.” and that’s the most succinct description of how the world works I think.

    • @[email protected]
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      342 years ago

      This one, everyone is winging it, and hopefully you get enough smart people in a room together they can come up with a solution.

      • @[email protected]
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        192 years ago

        Cooperative smart people. (someone who works with a lot of uncooperative smart people, smarter than me at least)

        • @[email protected]
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          2 years ago

          Don’t. I manage smart people. Divide the territory up. Getting them to work together at the edges. People are territorial, smart people are harder because they can give good reasons why they should get more territory. Everyone has their zone of control and everyone is happy.

          Also reminder: it is almost always better to have someone in pissing out vs out and pissing in.

  • @[email protected]
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    362 years ago

    That i succeeded in raising my children much better than my parents raised me. As a result, my now adult kids are happy, compassionate, have a good life, and they really love me :-)

  • @[email protected]
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    522 years ago

    I think seeing how fast many people turn into people they would not have liked when they were younger. It’s probably part of growing up but many people seem to not remember what they wanted to do better than their parents.

    • @[email protected]
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      242 years ago

      This is painful. My wife’s friend turned into her (wife’s) mother, the person who she previously claimed she most hated. In this individual’s case it’s that when she had kids she stopped caring about doing better.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        For me it was the opposite. I remember one day, when i had only one very young child, that i sounded like my mother. That was the incentive to turn it around. It was hard work and there was no internet yet to give me advice.

        Also, when my kids were in their teens i found it very helpful when i read a brochure about triple p parenting. I could not join them for a course, but the tip that changed a lot was; complimenting my kids instead *for good behavior *of berating them when they did something that was not ‘good’. The results were really good and i felt happier in the process, because it was much nicer to compliment my kids instead of hearing yourself being annoyed when they did something ‘bad’.

        Edited to add a clarification, in italics

        • @[email protected]
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          42 years ago

          I’m not sure I get it, maybe because I’m not a native speaker. So you said something like ‘Great job buddy, that was very much not good!’?

          • @[email protected]
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            72 years ago

            No, i started focusing on the things they did well, instead of focusing on the negative. It’s quite easy to only see which behavior is not acceptable and focus on that. But if kids do something positive, it’s easy to take it for granted, instead of for instance complimenting them. In other words, my perspective changed.

            If i look at my parents; they were always punishing me and if i behaved in a way they liked, they would say nothing, because that is the way i had to be. So, in their eyes it was normal to behave and that did not need to be complimented. So, their focus was exclusively on punishment, no rewards.

            Hope this makes a bit more sense (not a native speaker either)

            • @[email protected]
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              22 years ago

              Thanks that makes a lot more sense. I try to strike a balance, but focusing on the positive sounds gold. I’ll give it a try.

          • @[email protected]
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            42 years ago

            Praise vs criticism. So on balance more noticing and complimenting of the good they do, over criticizing their bad actions. Actually a lot more effective than criticism, in fact some schools purposefully ignore bad behaviour (within reason) while emphasizing praise for good behaviour.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 years ago

          My kids are quite young still but I’ve been using a philosophy of both carrot and stick with my threenager and toddler. Reward good behavior first, punish bad behavior when that doesn’t work

    • Franzia
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      62 years ago

      I can see how life has brought out deep compassion in me. But I imagine my younger self would hate me and think of me as a pushover who is not enjoying life, basically a loser who wasn’t radical enough.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 years ago

      Came here to post this.

      I had a nurse at an urgent care ask me if I had any joint or muscle pain. (She looked to be in her 50s.) I said “Ma’am, I’m over 40. Everything hurts all the time.”

      No one told me getting old would hurt so much.

  • @[email protected]
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    392 years ago

    How much disdain I have for change (“they are just making it worse!”) aka grumpy old man syndrome

    • @[email protected]
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      332 years ago

      If it was around before you were born, it’s perfectly natural.

      If it was invented when you were younger than 10, it’s new, cool, and exciting.

      Invented between ages 10 and 25? Innovative.

      Between 25 and 40? Silly to replace something that was working fine.

      Over 40? The work of the Devil!!

    • @[email protected]
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      32 years ago

      Honestly, this one sometimes surprises me too.

      Like, I’m okay with it… I’ve accepted being the grumpy old man but it still surprises me how often it feels like my default state the older I get.

    • @[email protected]
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      82 years ago

      I work in IT. I tell everyone once I retire all the electronics are gone and I’ll be on my front porch shaking my fist at the clouds.

    • @[email protected]
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      92 years ago

      Many things are really just getting worse, though.

      I’m in my 20s, I love new stuff, and am excited for new technologies…

      But the stuff that existed for the last 5-10 years? Yeah, they’re just getting objectively worse. From social media, to Google, to basically almost anything that private companies control.

      Not everything is getting worse, but enough are that it may be difficult to discern at times.

      • RedEye FlightControl
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        72 years ago

        Enshittification is real and driven by profits. We’re out of the “wild west” phase of the internet, companies are now trying to capitalize every last square inch of it.

        • Franzia
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          32 years ago

          Omg its just settler colonialism but on a pixelated screen. 🤯