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This topic comprises 2 pages: 1 2
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Topic: Old people
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Leo Enticknap
Film God
Posts: 7474
From: Loma Linda, CA
Registered: Jul 2000
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posted 03-23-2014 01:08 PM
I think certain ideas and approaches to life are "installed in your operating system" at a very young age and tend to stay there for life, but that includes receptiveness to new ideas, technologies and ways of doing things. My grandpa lived to 90 and was totally comfortable with email, the Internet, smart gadgets, you name it, right up until the end of his life. In fact, he was an early adopter of most of them. He was always up to date with what was happening in the news, and was at ease interacting with people in his own generation or others. He spent his working life as a pathologist in a busy hospital, and so keeping up with the latest scientific R & D was just part of his everyday work, and not something he was suddenly going to stop doing when he retired.
Contrast that with a mature postgrad student I know who started working on a PhD as a retirement project. He's writing up his dissertation on a mechanical typewriter (for which, ironically, I had to order ribbons for online from India from him, because you can't get 'em in England anymore), and producing handwritten "spreadsheets" of figures, calculated by mental arithmetic. He'll take long train trips and spend days in the basements of libraries and archives, going through hard copies of stuff that is readily available online. He is passionately interested in what was going on between 1909-32, but, basically, couldn't care less about anything that's happened since. He doesn't even have a phone in his house, and the only reliable way of communicating with him is to write him a letter and stick it in the mail. I don't know, but would guess that he was brought up by parents who took a similar approach to life, and it stuck in him.
As for theatres, the overwhelming majority of the workforces in all of them I've worked in have been aged roughly 16-35, with a few older projectionists and managers. I think the reason is pretty simple: the lifestyle and hours are not really compatible with raising a family or even living with someone who works conventional Monday-Friday, 8-5 hours, which is the situation you tend to find yourself in as you approach middle age. When I was in my 20s I had no problem working weekends and public holidays and in to the middle of the night, but doing that now would cause significant problems with my home life.
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