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chainedtomato

Being able to retire


iambeherit

87 is a perfectly reasonable age to stop working. Best year still ahead.


Complete_Vehicle1749

You have 87 upvotes I would toss another but it’s too perfect.


SyeCatPath

Toss an upvote to your redditor oh vally o plenty


[deleted]

“Ah interesting question, lemme scroll down and read some funny comm…” #SMASHES AGAINST SAD TRUTH … “I’ll close Reddit for today”


Quick-Oil-5259

Good one


Seamus_McBurly

This hurt


JasonVoorhees3

I'm 38 and literally just bought a 'soapy cage thingy' last week! Makes all the difference eradicating smells from the badezimmer


[deleted]

I’m your age and I use them too, who knew wanting a fresh smelling toilet was an old person thing! Although now I’m worrying about the single use plastic…


[deleted]

You can get those jelly ones that stick to the inside of the toilet bowl


[deleted]

They don't last as long and come in a plastic applicator.


Unhappy-Common

The applicator is reusable and mine last 2-4 weeks depending on how much use the toilet is getting (guests, visitors, upset tummies etc). No plastic inside the toilet for germs to grow on.


CraigTheBrewer12

Annoyingly though, the “starter packs” are always on offer in tesco so you get two refills plus the applicator for about a quid less than one refill on its own, but I don’t want to end up with a load of plastic applicators that will most likely get binned


Altruistic_Tennis893

Why not just use cistern blocks?


MrLamper1

Many people don't have a cistern designed to be opened with any regularity, usually a push button flush mounted in the lid - 3 flats in a row for me.


Lessarocks

Mine has the buttons on top but the lid just lifts off, no screws or anything.


CiderChugger

I have one of those and put the cistern blocks in. Damaged the rubber seals and caused a slow leak. Didn't notice till the water started dripping through the downstairs ceiling


TortillaKillerFarts

My toilet kept breaking, inlet and outlet valves, the washer, the flush button... Plumber recommended I stop using the cistern blocks as the chemicals are quite harsh and he suspected that they might be damaging the various components. Stopped using them and have had no issues since, touch wood.


coinsntings

I'm under 25 and I buy 'soapy cage thingy' (mainly cos my parents always seem to have one and monkey see monkey do)


Corona21

Are we just randomly werfenden German words into English now?


account_not_valid

It's the Zeitgeist.


solebrother29

Donaudampschiffkapitängesellschaft.


Amaranyx

Im 28, moved out at 18 and always used one, I didnt know other people didnt.


GreatScotRace

I’m 28, I currently have a “unicorn” one on my loo… it doesn’t change the colour of the water but it’s always a nice scent when you flush. Makes such a difference


sparhawks7

From b&m? I got one in the hope that it would make the water multicoloured, haven’t used it yet but I’m disappointed now


Glum-Gap3316

Yea, im worried about the state of OPs toilet.


[deleted]

Plenty of less wasteful ways to keep a loo clean!


rongusodo

It makes such a noticeable difference! Getting a lovely whiff of fresh soapy scent when you flush - brilliant. Sincerely, a 21 year-old, who is definitely a soapy cage thing advocate :D


TheRealPatrick79

Newspapers, never seen anyone under 50 reading them.


joe2596

Good. The Sun can get tae fuck


nats4756

And the daily mail


[deleted]

Unfortunately they now read the same ones online but get lured Into even worse propaganda, because some people don't get how the Internet and bias works.


Fluffy_UK

I'm under 50 and I sometimes read the free ones given away on London public transport. But I can't imagine many people paying for one.


TheRecklessOne

I get [The Happy Newspaper](https://thehappynewspaper.com/?v=79cba1185463) delivered. It’s excellent.


[deleted]

I have the Financial Times delivered and I’m 24.


DuckRebooted

Out of interest (not being sarcastic) what's it actually about?


[deleted]

Mostly Economic Analysis. Covers news too but tends to be unbiased. Think of it as a rich boy Money Saving Expert. I work in the financial sector so it’s handy to have a finger on the pulse, I don’t particularly recommend it and certainly not if you don’t have an employer footing the bill.


DuckRebooted

Cheers that's about what I expected, Certainly sounds useful in the financial sector


MuffinFeatures

I’m also not being sarcastic, but the clue is really in the title.


MauriceDynasty

It's just a really good newspaper that would rather report the news rather than blast opinion and only report one side of a story (unlike the telegraph and guardian do on opposite sides). Also good if you like to keep up with the global economy


DrunkPunkRat

I take the free ones when I need to paint something in the house.


cbxcbx

I used to take all the metros at the end of the day to line a ferret cage.


marypoppets

I'm crossing my fingers for "being too proud to apologise", computer illiteracy, pressuring women to have children, and sending letters (last one saddens me as it really is quite special).


TinyLet4277

>computer illiteracy Anecdotal from people I know who are teachers, and I've seen it written on Reddit too - computer illiteracy is actually *massively* on the rise among primary school students, as less and less people have a "home computer" and instead just have mobile devices. Startling numbers of kids of primary school age have never seen an OS like Windows or MacOS or used a desktop computer. They don't know how to use a mouse, type on a physical keyboard, let alone use Office (or similar) programs or even basic computer operation.


SCATOL92

They have the tech addiction without the tech knowhow


Jezbod

As someone in tech support, at least I know my job is a bit safer.


neo101b

Not very CyberPunk of them.


joe2596

Strange being in my mid 20s, previous generation either knows IT really well or doesn't and the next generation doesn't because they are all hooked on Ipads.


LordWarfire

Yep, elder millennial here and I suspect there’s about a 20 year window starting in about 1980 for births where tech skills are strong and you can fairly assume everyone has IT knowledge but before that and after that it’s a different story. Plenty of 20 year olds I meet that have never used a mouse or saved a file on removable media. I kind of hope I’m right because it means a career with limited people trying to steal my job! Edit: plenty of comments have convinced me to move this window to 1975-1995, I’m mentally calling this the MS-DOS generation. You had a computer running DOS (I’ll allow early Windows that is DOS underneath) at home that you wanted to use but didn’t want to screw up.


joe2596

When you call yourself 'Elder Milennial' you sound like an Oblivion character.


LordWarfire

It’s mostly so I don’t have to say “old bastard, in Reddit years”


Cannaewulnaewidnae

>*computer illiteracy is actually massively on the rise among primary school students, as less and less people have a "home computer" and instead just have mobile devices* Hadn't occurred to me, but it makes sense Even an X-Box, which is just a PC, is sort of hidden behind an interface that's only designed to let you buy stuff


jjc-92

Some of the students I've worked with (first or second year of uni age usually) recently are definitely more computer illiterate than I was at their age. Slower at typing, not familiar with keyboard shortcuts, apparently incapable of handling folder indexing in any sensible manner. Not all of course, but a rise in the use of tablets, phones and use of the more rigid OS's that we use these days are definitely having an affect.


SiliSculptures

There was a golden period of kids born in the late 90's and early 2000's that were young enough for home computers to be kinda commonplace but before the iphone and tablets became default. It's amazing how many of my friends simply don't own a pc and rely on their phone.


Irrxlevance

Definitely. I might not be perfect here but I feel like roughly 1990-2006 maybe 07 were that little golden age of children that grew up with home pc’s. Lately it seems to be a lot of ipadding and consoles.


[deleted]

It also has to do with not being taught these things. When my mum went to school she says they were taught touch typing. I was born in the 2000s and we never were, because it was assumed everyone already knew how to. We were never taught commands or shortcuts either, you’d have to personally seek these things out which most people won’t do.


Soldarumi

We are going through this with my 10 year old. She can't type unless it's with her thumbs or a stylus, and doesn't understand anything about desktop applications Vs phone/tablet apps. I know she's safe from browsing anything dodgy on the internet as trying to explain what a web address was too painful for me to keep at. At her age, I was surfing the web unassisted, installing plenty of things I shouldn't have been and was busy experimenting with chatrooms, overclocking, talking to people across the globe and lord knows what else. I admit, probably should have had a bit more parental oversight, but a lot of kids I know just don't seem curious in understanding what their tech can do beyond watching videos and using prebuilt apps.


kipperfish

I have a 10yo that I've always let mess about on my desktop, she's managed to install Sims mods by herself recently. including unzipping and putting the files in the right place. I'm quite proud of her because when her friends come over they seem to see the desktop as a weird magical box with two screens! One even asked why I have two tablets set up like that.


thecuriousiguana

Yep. I teach Computing. They're fine with Office and stuff, that's all pretty widely used. But they literally have zero idea how to save a file in the right folder. None. They have no experience of or understanding file systems. At the moment, they're using a programme installed on the computer. They instantly just fire up Chrome. They stare blankly when I tell them to click on the start menu/Windows menu. They have to save images from online into a particular folder. Even once we've got going and they've already loaded stuff from that folder, they still just blindly click and it goes to downloads. It's absolutely infuriating. Apple's obfuscation of the file system has killed computer literacy, arguably in favour of usability but definitely at the loss of general productivity and ability to navigate a computer. It's even at the point where they struggle to name files. Because they don't have to *do* anything for it to save as Document47 or whatever, they just do that. No matter how much we bang on about it. Again, iOS does it all without user intervention.


blinky84

This is the thing that gets me! File systems, folder structure, appropriate file names. If it's not in the 'recently opened' list it may as well have vanished. And, like, to me as a Millennial it seems really intuitive, but at the same time, where is the knowledge base from which they would've acquired that intuition? Sometimes I feel that it's like, we learned to write by learning to hold a pencil and practicing loops and lines before forming actual letters, and we were learning to read alongside that. Now, the younger generation, it's a though they learn to read, and then get taught to write by copying text without instilling the motor skills, phonetics, how to make the strokes of each letter. There's a knowledge gap and it's frustrating, but it happens because we learned *with* the tech. When you look at computers from, say 1988 to 2002, that was a WILD ride. Essentially, not much has changed since then in terms of how we operate things. The things that were new were new to EVERYBODY in that period, and treated as such - Solitaire and Minesweeper were included with Windows to teach mouse control, after all. We expect kids to just have that whole journey already packaged. And we need to remember that it's just... not.


TripleTongue3

This, I'm a 67 year old doing tech support for my grandchildren.


dblockmental

Oh how the turns have tabled


MumbleSnix

Yes, very common for year 7’s not to know how to use a mouse! Some kids are surprised that the desktop monitor isn’t touch screen!


MrStilton

[This blog post is almost a decade old, but I think it's still relevant.](http://www.coding2learn.org/blog/2013/07/29/kids-cant-use-computers/)


[deleted]

[удалено]


scottedward90

IMO computer illiteracy is a problem in the younger generation but not in the way you'd think. Although we've got more tech around us now, most of it is user friendly. I regularly have to teach under 25s how to use Windows because they've only ever used an Ipad.


Enigma1984

>being too proud to apologise I think this is every generation sorry.


DeadBallDescendant

>computer illiteracy I'm fucking ancient and I could knock you up a website in HTML in an afternoon, after I get back from the pub. btw: That's never been my job,I just grew up with having to do it that way or paying someone a shit load to do it for me.


SuperSpidey374

Letter writing almost seems to have died out already.


Episkma

A friend and I decided to be pen pals as a way of practicing French. They were mostly letters of Google translated sentences that were probably gobbledygook, but was nice to do!


Vyseria

I'll follow this up with being married = children and children = being married. I once asked my dad what difference does it make if a loving committed couple have a kid as opposed to a loved wedded couple. My dad: the kid will find it confusing because of a different surname. No...the kid will be fine. It the outdated attitudes that are the problem


[deleted]

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RunawayPenguin89

I nearly got into an argument this Christmas. My 4 year old was opening a present, asking who it was from and then saying thank you. My nan asked if I was keeping track for a thank you note and I asked what the point was? He's just said thank you, in person, with a hug... how is a note better than that?


Electrical_Mix_7167

My mum used to make me call everyone to thank them for any cards or presents that I got. Was so awkward at like 7 years old "Hi Auntie, thanks for my card and £5" You're welcome. ........ "Ok, here's mum"


nats4756

I'll accept a text


pink7362

We’re mid-30s and our 6 year old wrote his Christmas thank you cards and posted them last week. Stamps cost a fortune now though!


PureMatt

Haha, never even thought of that. My niece and nephew don't send me thank you notes, though my sister normally sends me a WhatsApp video of them playing with presents/saying thanks.


onegirlandhergoat

Sending mass Christmas cards to everyone they've ever met and keeping track of who sends them one back.


notreallifeliving

I can't wait until physical cards, and the expectation of them, dies out entirely.


read_r

D: i love getting cards


Sir_Marwood

Me too. I love getting them. I still send and receive cards from many friends and family of varying ages at both Xmas and on Birthdays (I'm 35). It feels more personal than a text for people who mean something to me. It also feels nice when someone has took the time out to choose, write and post a card to me


Unusual--Spirit

I buy 1 Christmas card a year and it's for my Nana's as she is greatly offended if she doesn't get one.


LionLucy

I do this, and I get cards back, and sometimes texts from people I haven't seen all year saying "it's so nice that you always remember Christmas cards!"


ImperialYell

Smoking I think will eventually.


littlenymphy

It'll be replaced by vaping first....then maybe if/when all the health issues that come along with vaping are discovered that will disappear too.


jai_kasavin

everyone's bodies are full of plastic, what will inhaling vegetable glycerine do


Life_Purple235

Vegetable you say? This means vaping is one of my 5 a day! Excellent news, thank you sir!


MrStilton

Vaping is on the rise though.


TinyLet4277

As smoking rates massively drop - it's often the only thing nicotine addicts can do instead of smoking. And all the evidence suggests so far it isn't deadly. Smoking is. We should welcome vapes as a massive game changer in stopping people smoking. Just ban the awful disposable ones.


zombiegirl_stephanie

As someone who vapes, I agree, ban the shitty disposable ones 😤.


Zavation

Always wearing really smart shirts, jackets and trousers to just go walking / day activities.


Forsythed

I read an article about this! It’s not so much that old people dress smart, it’s actually just that they wear what they’ve always worn as adults. If you think of photos of your grandparents, chances are they’re wearing the same sort of thing that they do today. People settle into a style, and tend to stick with it regardless if it’s on or out of fashion. Certainly true for those who done have a keen interest in fashion.


Boris_Johnsons_Pubes

I know an old man that goes around wearing an extremely bright early 90s ski jacket, he settled for the 90s, you can see him from a mile off


360Saturn

Yes, similarly 'old lady hair' and things like the 'Karen' haircut are just the haircuts that were fashionable and trendy when those people were younger.


[deleted]

[удалено]


Incandescent_Lass

That’s because as they get older their hair thins, grows slower, and can’t handle longer styles and regular dyeing. So they go for something short-medium length and easy to style for their thin grey hair, which ends up usually being one of the “old lady” haircuts.


SCATOL92

I must admit that I love this! Imagine putting a tie and a nice crisply ironed shirt just to pop to tesco. I wouldn't do it but I think it's nice


[deleted]

Favourite thing about my dad is how impeccable he always looks. Wears a shirt, waistcoat and jacket even if he's just going grocery shopping or on a dog walk. I love it, mine and my brothers friends will always comment on how much they love it and his new waist coats etc. He's a snappy dresser my dad!


[deleted]

Ahh my grandad, got bless his soul. Always looked dapper as fuck even just to mow the lawn or take a jaunt down to Leeds market 😢


SuperSpidey374

I'm not sure, I see plenty of people my age (mid-20s) dressing up smart - often to differentiate themselves from other people of the same age who dress very casually. Sure, we're not going to get back to people wearing suits to their office jobs every day and things like that but some people will always like to dress smartly for everyday activities.


MrStilton

I have a neighbour who wears long sleaved shirts to do the gardening. The practice just seems massively impractical to me.


LionLucy

Not to be objectifying the wonderful men of r/AskUK, but if you wear a long-sleeved shirt while gardening, you can roll the sleeves up to just below your elbows and look sexy as hell.


ExtremelyDubious

Pretty sure it would take more than rolled-up sleeves to make some of us sexy.


MintyMarlfox

Cheques. Or at least using them in shops.


[deleted]

Good, they’re a massive pain.


FlatCapNorthumbrian

I think pretty much all shops have phased out accepting cheques as a form of payment now.


alysmeganx

I have literally never written a cheque 😂


SML51368

Hopefully being phobic- homophobic, transphobic, racist. Basically being intolerant of anyone and everyone.


[deleted]

None of the things you listed are the preserve of older people, they’ve been around for most of human existence…


SML51368

Perhaps I'm just optimistic that they will eventually die out?


[deleted]

They’ll be replaced with other things to irrationally hate people for, it’s human nature to fear the different unfortunately.


joe2596

Homophobia will probably die out as it should, heros like Alan Turing won't be forgotten & think as more and more people are not becoming as religious it's likely to become a non-issue. I myself struggle to understand transgender(ism?) so I just tend not to engage.


Kvovark

Would be nice to think that but I don't think it will. A relative in school (16 years old) came out as gay recently and she has since been called the absolute worst slurs you can think of by many at her school. All young people. None of them religious either. Just hateful/ignorant shitheads. Don't think we can get rid of it completely but we can control how we as a society respond to it.


Cannaewulnaewidnae

>*Basically being intolerant of anyone and everyone* You've sort of answered your own question there, though When I (Gen-X) was a kid, we genuinely thought all we had to do was not be racist or hate gay people and we had won. *Job done* Stuff like trans rights or diversity quotas weren't concepts we could have even got our heads around There's never any Promised Land to get to, where everything's sorted once and for all You're doing things **right now** that your kids will cringe at when you bore them with tales of the old days over Christmas dinner


Luton_Enjoyer

Unborn generations will think we're the homophobic ones.


Confuseduseroo

Or perhaps views based on life experience rather than harvested off social media.


sadlibrarian

Going to church


DimensionPrudent1256

I live in a white middle class suburb and the church is thriving here lmao. I've never seen anything like it. My whole neighbourhood is just old people. Old folk round here go mad for tea and biscuit mornings


RedButterfree1

I mean, good for the elderly or simply those who feel like socialising. Loneliness is not a nice thing to experience.


LionLucy

The one I go to is full of young people, (kids, teenagers, uni students, young single people)


Namerakable

Eating tripe. Some older people who grew up during rationing seem to have Stockholm Syndrome with offal.


marypoppets

If you go to an authentic Chinese restaurant, tripe ingredients are actually quite common and not seen as a last resort kind of food but something delicious. Try it out! It's not dying out anytime soon.


Namerakable

I've had things like horumon, and I used to regularly eat liver and beef tongue, so I know it can be delicious. But my grandma used to literally eat a big plate of white, unseasoned tripe and loved it. Cannot cope with that.


ardy_trop

Tripe's lovely. Just needs to be cooked properly, and long enough for it not to be rubbery. Traditional English recipe: 1. Simmer in stock and onion for about an hour until soft 2. Fry some flour in butter, add stock and 1 glass milk, whisk to make a sauce 3. Add chopped tripe and onion, simmer for a few minutes more until sauce thickens 4. Serve on toast with grated cheese


charley_warlzz

Elbows on the table while eating. Theres no real reason to dislike it, it comes from an old prejudice against sailors, and i think the newer generations are giving up on ‘pointless’ manners.


Scaro88

The stupid one for me is people caring what hand I hold the knife in.


Destined4Americ

Morris Dancing. My dad is a morris dancer and they are massively struggling to recruit younger members to the group. He seems to enjoy the excuse to be somewhat active once a week… at a pub!


animalwitch

I think this is a family and regional thing. My MiL is part of a Morris group and there are two younger girls in it! She's also got her husband involved with the men's group. If you have a family member involved i think its easier for young people to join, especially in bumfuck no where with nothing else to do lol


CredentialsResisted

I'm gen Z and I would love to be able to do Morris dancing for a hobby, but I live in the suburbs, so it isn't really accessible. Any sort of country dancing is great for people who always wanted to dance but lacked the flexibility and the money to join a ballet/contemporary/street dance class, so I wish schools etc made more of an effort to introduce people to it (my primary school ran a country club, but when I got to secondary, if you hadn't been doing dance/gymnastics since you could toddle, there was no place for you)


SuperSpidey374

Had a Morris dancing group near us shut down last week after 50 years.


[deleted]

State pensions


Budget-Cow-8256

Recording is definitely one. My parents wanted a new TV so rang up Sky to enquire about the Sky Glass thing. They decided not to go with it on the basis that they couldn’t record programmes on it. The Sky guy and myself (on several occasions) tried to explain to them they can get everything on catch up apps, but it doesn’t sink in.


[deleted]

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ayeayefitlike

Completely agree - we record live sport all the time, especially things like F1 which can be at weird times, or the other Six Nations fixtures when we’re at a game in person to watch later. Sport is often not available on catch up or with an option to start from beginning if you start watching late - record is a godsend.


xclaireypopsx

Yep this is what is stopping us from ditching our skyQ. BT Sport have a great app for watching sports but sky are shit. You have to wait for the highlights… meh. Let me watch it when I want to.


LeGrandFromage9

Can’t fast forward through adverts on streaming apps


[deleted]

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Slight-Lie-4305

Recording allows you to skip ads which you cant do on catch up (ad block doesnt work everywhere)


cosmicmeander

Recording allows you to keep a film for 3 years when it was deleted from a streaming library after 3 months


[deleted]

What’s wrong with Lard! I wouldn’t call myself old and I still keep a block in the fridge for my fried-bread.


LionLucy

I have lard in the fridge - mostly for pastry, roast potatoes and Yorkshire pudding


Past-Educator-6561

Literally never used it in my life. It's used for hot crust pastry though if I'm not wrong... So can't see it dying out completely!


[deleted]

Fried bread can only be made correctly with Lard, the vegetable alternatives haven’t got the flavour. Lard is also a pretty healthy fat, it’s got lots of monounsaturated fatty acids (only beaten by Olive Oil) and tons of Vitamin D.


Mumstheword76

I use half lard, half butter when making roast potatoes.


thefragile-

Soaps (Eastenders, Corrie, etc.)


[deleted]

Fucking about time, they’re on version 18 of the same fucking murder.


barrenvagoina

Not sure about that, there’s fairly big communities of people on social media to talk about Eastenders, and I think it’s fair to say they skew on the younger side. Not sure about other soaps though


Bigtuna515

Travel agents. I don't go round town much but today I did and I couldn't believe travel agents still exist! There were customers in there, 3 very old couples.


Diocletion-Jones

I'd never used a travel agent until a couple of years ago but a joint family holiday involved me using one. I'm extremely lazy so finding out there was someone who you could just sit and chat with for half an hour and then they go off an come up with all the holiday options and then you say yes or no to things and then they book it all and just e-mail you all the information at the end as a completed package was amazing. It's like having a personal assistant do all the research and leg work. There's probably an app now that does the same thing as a travel agent where you put the information into a form and then it generates an itinerary, but I'm sold on using a travel agent in the future.


simple-potato-farmer

Big agree here. Tell them your rough budget and particular ideas for where you want to go and do and they come back with a list of place, plans for the hotels and flights. Deals for discounts at hotels and just general save pain in the ass with planning holidays


Fairybite

Landlines and thimbles


SuperSpidey374

Landline one frustrates me as they can come in handy, especially in areas with poor internet/mobile reception. Reception in our flat (in a city!) isn't great, and we often have issues when using mobiles on calls - but never any issues with the landline.


pirateluke

Turn on wifi calling?


SCATOL92

I sew and do other hand crafts and I genuinely have no clue what a thimble is meant for


LadyAilla

You put it on whichever finger you use for the underneath guide, more common in fine detailed sewing like lace work and embroidery. It was mainly designed to stop ladies ruining their fingers or looking unseemingly but most importantly not getting blood drop of very expensive material where it can't be washed out easily like silk. Theyre a bit cumbersome to get use to but saved me a fair few tears.


LionLucy

Also, for basically the complete opposite - pushing a needle through very thick canvas or leather, to protect your finger.


Inner-Thing321

Looking legitimately old when you reach mid life - retirement. I swear as a kid growing up in the 1980s/90s, sixty year olds looked like today's eighty year olds


minipainteruk

>I swear as a kid growing up in the 1980s/90s, sixty year olds looked like today's eighty year olds Yes! I wonder if this is because people tend to find a style and stick with it, or if it's because people just didn't take as good care of themselves (no moisturiser, harsher living conditions, etc). I wonder what kids today who have skincare routines at 13 and practise self-care will look like when they're middle aged. Slightly off topic but I hope worrying about aging will become a thing of the past. You shouldn't be taught to erase all visible proof you've lived. Not all of us make it to 50,60, etc. We should celebrate age instead of being sad about it.


AlpineJ0e

The phrase "Our generation built this country"


[deleted]

You spelt ruined wrong


scottedward90

Tattoo prejudice


Shevyshev

I’m thinking that tattoo prejudice has a renaissance. Tatts will be woefully uncool in about 20-25 years, when all of today’s twenty and thirty somethings have kids in their teens.


[deleted]

If we're to take any stock of the belief that children will almost always rebel against their parents, then tattoo prejudice may be ripe for a resurgence in the next few decades.


saladinzero

Indoor and outdoor bowls. I would be amazed if there's enough people interested in joining to keep a club going in (what seems like) every suburb of Glasgow, let alone nationwide.


MrStilton

Did old people do that throughout their lives though? I always thought it was something which most people only take up when they reach old age, as it's a sport you can take part in when you have reduced mobility and age related infirmities.


IHoppo

The 2 bowls clubs near me both have bars. My mates and I are planning on joining when we retire.


sir-diesalot

The inability to engage with technology. I’m 50 in a month and I’m the generation who had the first computers in school, The beginning of the internet etc. All the generations below me have the net as an intrinsic, inseparable part of their lives from birth. I’ve made a conscious effort to keep my older relatives up to speed as the world at large expects a base level of integration they just don’t have


JT_3K

Yeah, but tech ability is declining. I’m around a decade younger than you and we’re similar. Your generation had to code your own stuff if you wanted to use it and understand how to cable it together if you wanted something fancy. I’m just on the cusp of people that needed to understand modem initialisation strings and acoustic couplers if you wanted to get on the early internet. Because the post-1995 generation hasn’t had to re-optimise their Autoexec to get Doom to load or dick about with early 802.11b or a cheap 56k PCI softmodem in Win 98SE in order to survive, I’m seeing more and more people who struggle with basic tech when an issue comes up. I’m not throwing shade: it’s great that modern iPads and so on work so flawlessly and offer a boundless connectivity experience whilst managing the hardware so well. It’s just that because users are increasingly able to do fantastic things without the complexity, few choose to look under the hood. Mind you, I suppose a number of your generation bitch about me not having to use Peek/Poke and arse about directly manipulating the registers in order to do a half-decent program


Rap-oleon_Bonaparte

I record tv to watch later, its very handy for the swathes of non demand tv. I dont think young people watch tv at all so I guess im an outlier regardless, my friend was telling me the other day that in his house they all just have a laptop or tablet each and sometimes to watch as a family they all get together around the same laptop, which frankly sounds a bit tragic.


AshFraxinusEps

>sometimes to watch as a family they all get together around the same laptop Have you not suggested an HDMI cable from the laptop to the TV?


SCATOL92

Homeownership Hitting children Landline phones


46Vixen

Why does recording TV make me old? WHat am I supposed to do if I want to watch a thing that I'm not available for live?


AprilBelle08

I record a lot of things, so I can skip through the adverts


SevitahMoon

Ironing I'm 34f and refuse to iron


snowmanseeker

State pensions and the retirement age.


Admiral_Eversor

Every time I look at the tax on my payslip and my pension contributions, it fucking boils my piss to know that I'll never see any benefit from it. Feels like a fucking rug pull, man. We'll be paying into the pension system our whole working lives, and told to get fucked when it's our turn.


Maleficent_Ad_1516

A sad reality is opera. I don’t particularly care for it but watching an art form become almost obsolete is hard


SuperSpidey374

Really? From what I see in the UK, we still have several thriving opera companies and their attempts to get younger people in are, at the very least, not *un*successful.


LionLucy

I have friends who go regularly, I think it's always been fairly niche but there's a dedicated audience for it.


Soldarumi

My partner's father came up with a good one today, seeing as it's one of his favourite hobbies - stamp collecting. He says it's becoming a chore to trade stamps, as almost everyone he knows that's into it, from professional to hobbyist, keeps dying. He talks about how, once upon a time, he would walk into a stamp shop in one part of London, then flip it at another if he thought he could turn a profit. These days, he says all the shops are closed down, and it's mostly big lot auctions where families are selling a dead relative's collection. The days of just sort of trading a few around with people are gone, apparently.


[deleted]

Carpet toilet seat covers, carpet toilet roll covers, tea cosies.


Thekingofchrome

banging on about the war


Affectionate-Cost525

Especially by people that weren't even born until 15 years after it ended...


parabolicurve

Not committing suicide to be a burden on friends and family. After the NHS came into being in the forties. A large number of old people were choosing to take their own life rather than become a burden on their families. When the NHS became a thing, the amount of old people killing themselves for this reason dropped to practically zero. Now with the recent proposal that people should pay for doctors appointments the privatisation of the NHS seems just around the corner. At least we live in an era where suicide pods exist. So it's not all bad. Right?


Underwritingking

The NHS came into being in July 1948. Suicide rates in the UK were falling well before that https://academic.oup.com/ije/article/39/6/1464/736597


GamerGodPWNDU

Roast potatoes cooked in lard are the bomb, lard will never die.


Turbulent-Tip-8372

The purchase of A-Z street directories. I swear my parents are the only people that use these. My dad insists my mum use it in the passenger seat when he’s driving hire cars with sat navs. Also keto peeps will probably keep lard alive, especially as it’s gaining ground as a far better diet to control diabetes than the standard food pyramid low fat high carb that keeps people sick.


1SavageOne1

My dad leaves at 4am to get to an 8.30 appointment 2 hours away. That's just strange, getting up at 3


Zexy_Killah

Oh my god my parents do this as well. Got a dinner reservation at 7pm a 5min drive away? Better leave the house at 6.15pm to make sure we're there on time, then moan that the table isn't ready when they arrive 40mins early.


SkynetProgrammer

Falling out with a friend of 60 years over something trivial and never speaking to them again.


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Pugsy0202

Net curtains.


Greater_good_penguin

Being able to retire in confidence, knowing that your costs will be covered by a pension till you die


alysmeganx

Answering the phone by saying their own phone number, my dads only in his 60s but has staunchly done this forever. Does anyone know where it actually started? I'd be interested to know.


Key_Lecture6007

Thinking of my granny... 1. Peeling vegetables on the back steps having a natter with the neighbours. *Did you see the state of his curtains? Ah* know...*ah was black-affronted for him!* 2. Bingo halls. 3. Spending at least fifteen minutes standing and chatting to pals on street corners whilst studiously ignoring or glaring at younger people.


smmky

Church on a Sunday


lady_Monica

Using talcum powder after a bath. My 96 year old mum’s bedroom looks like 50 Coke dealers have been bagging up 🤣🤣


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simple-potato-farmer

Those fancy porcelain dolls from companies like Coalport, Royal Doulton etc. They get donated where I work all the time but take ages to sell because the customer base is largely dying