Started By
Message

re: To those that experienced the 80s

Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:19 pm to
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:19 pm to
Truthfully, I'm more towards the median when it comes to this. The past wasn't always better, and neither is the future always preferable.

quote:

I'm just noting that I believe there is a correlation between increasing depression and decreasing attention spans with the rise of instant gratification to all of our hedonistic desires.


This is where being vigilant in keeping up with the times, as you said, is key. If you walk back that assertion of more expedient gratification being the driving force behind depression, one can make the argument that we should live like the Amish/pre-industrial times in order to truly be happy. All due respect to the Amish, but frick that. People found ways to happily coexist with a myriad of advents throughout human history that brought about gratification more quickly--the current era is no different, just the latest iteration of the same.

What truly irks me, though, is the predilection of millenials to shite on their own generation just as quickly as their elders. That's not healthy--stand up for yourselves just like your predecessors did.

Of course, that could just be me failing to keep up with the times of current generations becoming more self-deprecating in order bridge the generational gap more easily, to bring this whole charade full circle
This post was edited on 2/2/16 at 9:21 pm
Posted by Alahunter
Member since Jan 2008
90739 posts
Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:30 pm to
Having lived in the 80's,there is a real perspective that canbe given as acomparison to today.is it somewhatbiased by time and nostalgia? Absolutely. But there is also the experience of both. There were alot of things better from that period. Just like some things ate better now. Sometimes, ignorance truly is bliss and simplicity is better.
Posted by VagueMessage
Fayetteville, AR
Member since Jun 2013
3908 posts
Posted on 2/2/16 at 9:37 pm to
quote:


What truly irks me, though, is the predilection of millenials to shite on their own generation just as quickly as their elders. That's not healthy--stand up for yourselves just like your predecessors did.

Of course, that could just be me failing to keep up with the times of current generations becoming more self-deprecating in order bridge the generational gap more easily, to bring this whole charade full circle


This confuses me, too. It seems to be mostly an Internet thing (YouTube and Reddit come to mind, specifically), but I don't typically hang out with teenagers and early 20-somethings, so maybe it's worse than I think.

quote:

f you walk back that assertion of more expedient gratification being the driving force behind depression, one can make the argument that we should live like the Amish/pre-industrial times in order to truly be happy. All due respect to the Amish, but frick that.


I actually think people who live like that are probably among the happiest on the planet. They wake up every day knowing their role and station in life, they likely don't experience mid life crises brought on by life and society's expectations, and keep generally grounded expectations. I've long thought that a major key to every day happiness is to keep your expectations realistic and don't hinge your livelihood on things and circumstances way beyond your control. I think there's something to be said for avoiding being caught up in an overcrowded society's rat race.

Of course, all that being said, I couldn't see myself living like that. If anything, if someone like me were to even give it a shot, I would feel too much like I'm running from my problems.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter