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✏️ What's Nostalogia? In 40 years, what will people be nostalgic for?
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Answer:
nostalgia is related to the age of the person. A 50-year-old now is nostalgic for the same things as a 50-year-old in 40 years time will be nostalgic for. As people get older, they change.
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Answer:nostalgia is related to the age of the person. A 50-year-old now is nostalgic for the same things as a 50-year-old in 40 years time will be nostalgic for. As people get older, they change.
In part, nostalgia is related to the age of the person. A 50-year-old now is nostalgic for the same things as a 50-year-old in 40 years time will be nostalgic for. As people get older, they change. Their childhood is remembered with fondness. Kids have a freedom, an innocence, and a sense of belonging to a family that provides protection. Regardless of era, adults look back nostalgically at those days. This kind of nostalgia is really just about growing up.
Location, nation, socioeconomic status, family structure, etc can change over time, but it can change in either direction. eg your grandmother may have grown up poor, in a small rural village in the ‘old country’. Her nostalgia is about a simpler life, where everyone knew each other and looked out for each other. Then she emigrated, moved to a city, married, raised your mother. Your mother is nostalgic about a bustling city, going to movies and dances, shopping, hanging out with friends. Then as an adult, she met your Dad, moved to his family farm in a small community, and raised you. Now you are nostalgic for a simple but happy childhood of living in a community where everyone knew each other, etc. You and your grandmother led similar lives, and are nostalgic about the same thing. The fact they were 50 or 60 years apart, is meaningless. People are nostalgic for their childhood — whatever that childhood was. These aspects of life we are nostalgic for, can actually be recreated.
The other aspect is related to era. eg my mother, in her late 70s, grew up before TV. She is not nostalgic for favourite childhood TV shows like I am. I grew up before paranoid security gripped the world. I am nostalgic for ease of travel, and a pre-internet innocence, that kids today will never experience.
So… what do we have now that I think will be lost in 40 years?
Religious freedom. Already we are so politically correct we ban Christmas pageants in schools so as not to offend the Muslims. We have anti-theists who, at the merest mention of religion, will loudly protest they are having religion “shoved down their throats". The social justice warriors are suppressing people's individual rights, in favour of a collective loud voice. If you aren't with the loud left wing, then you'd better shut up. In 40 years time, people will be nostalgic for the freedom of self-expression, no matter what it is they want to express. Peyos, hijab, bindis, saffron robes, etc, will be effectively banned from being worn in public. People will be nostalgic for a time when they didnt have to hide their true selves and put on a fake mask of the publicly accepted “religion".
I think 40 years from now, we will have many more millions of stateless people too. Those who are refugees, or children of refugees. Unable to return to the place they originated, and with no country willing to take them, they will be forever locked in limbo. An underclass of people with no rights, no hope and nobody who cares, they will be ostracized and forgotten by the whole world. The world will see them as a problem that is too big to be solved. They will be nostalgic for a time when they believed there was still hope. They will be nostalgic for the compassion once showed them. They will be nostalgic for a place to call home, and the freedom to choose their own path in life.
This last kind of nostalgia is something we could recreate as a society. But paranoia and selfishness stop us. We want it for ourselves, but if it costs too much, we deny it to others. We fear losing our own advantages and privileges if we share them, so we don't share. Health care for all? Nope, it would cost me too much.
But humanity and economics aren't zero-point. If one person gains, it does not mean another person loses. In fact we can all be winners. But those in positions of power and priveledge refuse to see that. They want to keep others down, because they are so paranoid about losing what they have. It is madness.
In 40 years we will be nostalgic for compassion, hope, trust and freedom. Those are disappearing.
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