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Bill Gray's avatar

One of my favorite comments is “the older we get, the better we were”. A close second is “nostalgia is the most powerful drug”. I think fond remembrance and longing for the way things were is inextricably linked to the safety of knowing how things turned out. You see this with all things cultural; movies, music and art. Conservative people tend to eschew the avant garde as dangerous - Elvis is a perfect example - but when he became mainstream and later dead, he became a hero of the same people who’s parents likely condemned him for is morality busting swiveling hips. Aging and becoming weaker also tends to make people cling to what they know. It takes a lot of energy and courage to face an uncertain future. What we do know for certain is that change is the only constant and you can never truly go backwards in time.

Linda Hoenigsberg's avatar

I wrote a post about this one time. I grew up in the early 1950s. I remember it very nostalgically, probably because of television shows, like The Donna Reed Show and Leave It to Beaver. But we had to crawl under our desks and put our hands over our heads in school "just in case" there was a danger from Khruschev's Russia. An air raid siren went off every Tuesday as a test. Some people built bomb shelters in their backyards. There was definite anxiety all around.

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