Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am a 41 year old European and the world so far seems quite predictable. Perhaps you weren't keeping up with global politics/economics and science, or were not taught enough of it in school? Because where we are vis-a-vis climate change was foretold years ago, along with many alternate but largely similar scenarios; countries made pandemic plans (and directors made pandemic movies) way before Covid hit; the Middle East is still mired in mess, like it's been all my life; China has been on this political and economic growth curve for many years, just like my economics teacher explained in high school. However I am aware that some parts of the US did not have stellar K-12 and university systems decades ago - so some of this may have escaped your notice.
Wow! European arrogance is real! Do you still live there or here? If here, why?
Anonymous wrote:The world has changed remarkably fast over the past 200 years. In my great grandmother's lifetime she saw the advent of cars, planes, 2 world wars, suffrage, the civil rights movement, the moon landing, and more. The way of life changed drastically and access to news did too. I was born in the 70s and I think smartphones have been the biggest change and they make 90% of life so much worse. I worry about our health and relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in my late 40s and I have noticed in the past year a growing sense of feeling like every single aspect of the world has changed so drastically that it's hard to integrate all of it into a somewhat coherent understanding of the world. Do you relate? Don't relate?
In the early 2000s, I did not feel like the technological changes and national/world events taking place were shattering my basic assumptions about how the world works. I felt like I could loosely anticipate the trajectory of my life over the next five to ten years. I do not know if this is a natural part of aging or if I am lacking perspective of how this chaotic time fits with history. My parents were born in the late 1940s and I don't know that by the 1980s (their 40s) the world looked so drastically different.
I look back at the 1990s and it all seemed so much....quieter and predictable, but I was an adolescent.
My question is---do you think the world changed faster and more drastically from 2000-2021 than it did from 1980-2000, 1960-1980, 1940-1960....or is it just the effect of being in mid-life?
Life just feels different and really weird now. I'm 50.
Technology puts everything right in your face. Like RIGHT in your face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am in my late 40s and I have noticed in the past year a growing sense of feeling like every single aspect of the world has changed so drastically that it's hard to integrate all of it into a somewhat coherent understanding of the world. Do you relate? Don't relate?
In the early 2000s, I did not feel like the technological changes and national/world events taking place were shattering my basic assumptions about how the world works. I felt like I could loosely anticipate the trajectory of my life over the next five to ten years. I do not know if this is a natural part of aging or if I am lacking perspective of how this chaotic time fits with history. My parents were born in the late 1940s and I don't know that by the 1980s (their 40s) the world looked so drastically different.
I look back at the 1990s and it all seemed so much....quieter and predictable, but I was an adolescent.
My question is---do you think the world changed faster and more drastically from 2000-2021 than it did from 1980-2000, 1960-1980, 1940-1960....or is it just the effect of being in mid-life?
Life just feels different and really weird now. I'm 50.
Anonymous wrote:
I am a 41 year old European and the world so far seems quite predictable. Perhaps you weren't keeping up with global politics/economics and science, or were not taught enough of it in school? Because where we are vis-a-vis climate change was foretold years ago, along with many alternate but largely similar scenarios; countries made pandemic plans (and directors made pandemic movies) way before Covid hit; the Middle East is still mired in mess, like it's been all my life; China has been on this political and economic growth curve for many years, just like my economics teacher explained in high school. However I am aware that some parts of the US did not have stellar K-12 and university systems decades ago - so some of this may have escaped your notice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I am a 41 year old European and the world so far seems quite predictable. Perhaps you weren't keeping up with global politics/economics and science, or were not taught enough of it in school? Because where we are vis-a-vis climate change was foretold years ago, along with many alternate but largely similar scenarios; countries made pandemic plans (and directors made pandemic movies) way before Covid hit; the Middle East is still mired in mess, like it's been all my life; China has been on this political and economic growth curve for many years, just like my economics teacher explained in high school. However I am aware that some parts of the US did not have stellar K-12 and university systems decades ago - so some of this may have escaped your notice.
Just wow . . .
Anonymous wrote:
I am a 41 year old European and the world so far seems quite predictable. Perhaps you weren't keeping up with global politics/economics and science, or were not taught enough of it in school? Because where we are vis-a-vis climate change was foretold years ago, along with many alternate but largely similar scenarios; countries made pandemic plans (and directors made pandemic movies) way before Covid hit; the Middle East is still mired in mess, like it's been all my life; China has been on this political and economic growth curve for many years, just like my economics teacher explained in high school. However I am aware that some parts of the US did not have stellar K-12 and university systems decades ago - so some of this may have escaped your notice.
Anonymous wrote:I am in my late 40s and I have noticed in the past year a growing sense of feeling like every single aspect of the world has changed so drastically that it's hard to integrate all of it into a somewhat coherent understanding of the world. Do you relate? Don't relate?
In the early 2000s, I did not feel like the technological changes and national/world events taking place were shattering my basic assumptions about how the world works. I felt like I could loosely anticipate the trajectory of my life over the next five to ten years. I do not know if this is a natural part of aging or if I am lacking perspective of how this chaotic time fits with history. My parents were born in the late 1940s and I don't know that by the 1980s (their 40s) the world looked so drastically different.
I look back at the 1990s and it all seemed so much....quieter and predictable, but I was an adolescent.
My question is---do you think the world changed faster and more drastically from 2000-2021 than it did from 1980-2000, 1960-1980, 1940-1960....or is it just the effect of being in mid-life?