When any why do we feel nostalgic ? I really dunno why um fellin this.... ... .. .
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Funny you ask. I recently reconnected with an old friend from university, and we talked for four hours well into the night, going down memory lane. Our conversation made me so happy. So nostalgic. Suddenly, I was a bright-eyed, bushy-tailed young freshman again, both elated and terrified to have gained entry into a top-tier university and a well-known piano performance program (with imposing recital halls).
My friend remembered things that I didn’t remember, and I remembered things that she didn’t remember. So together we were able to form a more cohesive narrative for our lives.
Krystine Bacho, a psychologist, writes in this : In a time of rapid social and technological change, nostalgia motivates the rehearsal of past experiences that can remind us of our authentic self. This is so true. We are so caught up in the minutiae of living and getting by—always struggling and trying to achieve—reviving memories of past times when things were simpler, easier, when we had all of our optimism intact, makes us feel good. It’s how we rediscover our strengths during hard times. It helps us tell our life story.
You can’t just live for the future. If a person isn’t nostalgic at all, what does that say about them? They couldn’t have been too happy in the past, and probably aren’t happy currently. Nostalgia teaches us many things about ourselves, and sometimes those things remind of us how we can be better, stronger, more resilient people.
Nostalgia is how a lot of people cope with stress, depression, and unhappiness. It’s helpful in small doses. It’s only harmful when the past seems like a far better time than the present—and a safer place in which to live than the future. Remember Great Expectations’ Miss Havisham?
Too much nostalgia may suggest that someone need to make changes in her or his own life, as to avoid glorifying the past too much—or living in it.
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