Getting Uglier Every Year.

I do not like a white-bread world. I WANT to see and feel diversity. I love to hear someones story….and learn all the things that make them who and what they are. Once years ago when I was an EMT I was on a call for a gunshot to the hand. Now….this guy was seriously tattooed. His whole face, torso, arms…..but not his hands.

While finding out his story he told me he was frantically getting inked because he could not destroy art. He had shot himself in the face once…survived and gotten inked there to protect the space. He shot himself in the hand. Everyone has a story. Ask….listen.
 

I have recently noticed that people are getting uglier and uglier every year.
Are you looking at real people or just people in media pictures? I was very impressed during my travels this past year at how in shape, decent weight, normal looking everyone was in the towns/cities I visited. Except for when I visitied the zoo in Columbus OH, people there looked too fat.

Here are pics of real people seen on my travels this summer, no weird scary people that I noticed (picture labels are facetious):

The crime-ridden Chicago streets:
Chicago streets.jpg

Terrifying young people in Boston:
Boston highschool kids touring Harvard.jpg

Frightening violent demonstration in Washington DC:
demonstration WashDC.jpg

Scary subway station stop:
subway stop in WashDC.jpg
 
I have nothing to prove this but I firmly believe that many of the drugs, legal and illegal, that people take are responsible for bipolar and many other psychological problems in recent generations.
Here's another possibility ... I recommend you guys watch this movie, based on a true story ...

 
I was born in 1947 when there were no gays, lesbians, blacks, browns, tattoos (to speak of), uglies, fats, dumb bigots, wags, dagos, abos, spicks and rednecks. At least I wasn’t aware of them at the time. Being in the condition of new born I didn’t really need to know or b

Tommo, this is an excellent piece of writing. Thank you.
Rick, alias Fuzzybuddy

 
I use to go with a girl that had two ex boyfriends tattooed, one on each boob.
All I could think of was what long faces they’ll have in 50 years.
What a reminisce that has evoked. On the ballroom floor, dancing the jive with the wife of a good friend, the lady spun round and somehow her left boob ended up in my right hand. I was mortified, leading her to the edge of the dance floor, I took the dear lady's hand in mine and tapped my forehead gently up and down on her shoulder and said: "I am so sorry dear lady, please forgive me." She brought her other hand to the back of my neck pressed my head into her shoulder in a gentle squeeze, then kissed my cheek, and said: "Nothing to forgive, you lovely man." Then just as I was getting the colour out of my face she stepped forward and whispered in my ear: "But I bet you felt a right tit then, didn't you?" That was me, crimson face again.
 
Ya know, I remember the 18-30 year olds of the sixties. The guys all wore suits, ties, loafers plus crew cuts. and the gals all worn high neck, below the knee skirts.
NO, we didn't!!!!!! Rememeber!!!!! we were the "great unwashed", those hippies with the long hair, "love children" with painted faces, tie died tee shirts, worn out jeans, girls with miniskirts, tight blouses way too low in the front, no shoes-sandals.
ETC, ETC
Excerpt for tattooes, which I fear will come back to haunt the wearers, who cares. Young people are going to grow up to be geezers just like us.
 
Ya know, I remember the 18-30 year olds of the sixties. The guys all wore suits, ties, loafers plus crew cuts. and the gals all worn high neck, below the knee skirts.
NO, we didn't!!!!!! Rememeber!!!!! we were the "great unwashed", those hippies with the long hair, "love children" with painted faces, tie died tee shirts, worn out jeans, girls with miniskirts, tight blouses way too low in the front, no shoes-sandals.
ETC, ETC
Excerpt for tattooes, which I fear will come back to haunt the wearers, who cares. Young people are going to grow up to be geezers just like us.
I was a teenager in the 60s, and my parochial school uniform had a high neck and below the knee skirt - and as soon as school let out, I rolled up the waistband of the skirt, opened a couple buttons on the shirt, slathered on the forbidden lipstick and mascara...

Your post made me smile - and I agree about tattoos. My friend's daughter spent an absolute fortune getting a tattoo removed because she felt it no longer expressed who she really is...
 
Close to home for me. Granville. Westies boy. Working class. Not that I was conscious of any class distinction back then. After teaching teens for 50 years I now realise being different was normal. I’ve probably had 5000 teens in front of me over the years; every one of them different. Different shapes, interests, abilities, experiences, capabilities, physiology, social and family, cultures, ethnicities, histories, religions, attitudes and interactions.

Making judgements about any one of them was fraught with pitfalls. It was enough to deal with the judgement they made about me and each other. Parents also had input as they should but it’s difficult to deal with the fixations of adults who consider themselves good parents and even better teachers. Take for example the father (a politician of some note) telling me that his daughter was destined to fail physics because “physics was a boys subject and girls wouldn’t understand it”. Oh how I could go on with examples of situations that required me to be guardian, carer, mediator, psychologist, educator and administrator of sometimes archaic laws and rules. Oh, yes, and teach physics.

It used to scare me. Still does a bit. The first step was to eliminate judgements from my thinking. No uglies, genders, colour, age, religion, sociology- economic background, ****** preferences. Even the most bizarre interactions had a real and logical basis.
I meet many of my ex students from time to time. I’m a little embarrassed but quietly pleased that what they learned from me can be summed up nicely by one student: “ Mr. D, you were always finding a different way with me. You never got tired of me asking questions and explaining. And you told really good stories. I was inspired”. I blush even now to write it. I see her from time to time. She manages a dress shop and is a single parent (with tattoos).
Snap. I too was a teacher at secondary schools - Sefton, Bankstown, Picnic Point, East Hills, Milperra and Blacktown. Mostly girls of various ethnicities and I made sure as much as I could that the limitations placed on me due to my gender were not on my students.

I was always interested in science subjects but was refused the opportunity to study physics for matriculation even though I was at a prestigious selective school in the city. The Principal, who held a B Sc, had not been allowed to study it and saw no reason to offer it to girls in 1957, the very year the Sputnik 1 was in orbit. My own uncle, a darling man in many ways, believed that girls could not do physics. He had been a "computer" during WW II and he liked to talk to me later about calculus.

I made sure that at my last school, a catholic junior high school, where I was Dep Principal, we would branch out into computing, CAD and Design and Technology at the first opportunity. We were so far ahead of the curve that we had to design our own school based courses until the Dept of Education caught up.
 
When I was a kid the fad was to put a hair cream in your hair. I believe we called it "Brylcreem" or something like that. Then we used our combs to really slick down our hair. We thought we were pretty "cool." However, our clothes were still neet. The girls looked pretty nice too.

The hippies came along in the 60s and we were forced to look at them. Many were weird clothes, long hair and tried to speak a strange words.

However, in the last 20 years it appears people are dying for attention and will do anything to look gross. Maybe it's a lack of direction, maybe it's too much illegal drugs or maybe the human race is just getting more and more stupid as the years roll by. Yes, you are right. We sure will have some ugly seniors in the next 2 or 3 decades. Glad I wouldn't be around.
 

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I was a teenager in the 60s, and my parochial school uniform had a high neck and below the knee skirt - and as soon as school let out, I rolled up the waistband of the skirt, opened a couple buttons on the shirt, slathered on the forbidden lipstick and mascara...

Your post made me smile - and I agree about tattoos. My friend's daughter spent an absolute fortune getting a tattoo removed because she felt it no longer expressed who she really is...
As a fellow parochial schoolmate, we learned to ditch the uniform by the time we hit the sun.
People get tats when they are way too young to permanently mark their bodies. What is near & dear when you're 22, ain't what is important in your life at 35.
Personally, I want to see a human being next to me, not somebody whose body looks like the Sunday funnies.
 
People get tats when they are way too young to permanently mark their bodies. What is near & dear when you're 22, ain't what is important in your life at 35.
I have a tattoo on each forearm.....got them both when I was 14.....thought they were great for six months.....have hated them for 65 years.
 
When I was a kid the fad was to put a hair cream in your hair. I believe we called it "Brylcreem" or something like that. Then we used our combs to really slick down our hair. We thought we were pretty "cool." However, our clothes were still neet. The girls looked pretty nice too.

The hippies came along in the 60s and we were forced to look at them. Many were weird clothes, long hair and tried to speak a strange words.

However, in the last 20 years it appears people are dying for attention and will do anything to look gross. Maybe it's a lack of direction, maybe it's too much illegal drugs or maybe the human race is just getting more and more stupid as the years roll by. Yes, you are right. We sure will have some ugly seniors in the next 2 or 3 decades. Glad I wouldn't be around.
I think you made a good point with the first part of your last paragraph- how far do young people need to go to get attention, but if they can't get "good" attention they'll go for "bad" attention...
 
In the 60s, post Beatles, long hair and beards were the rage. I can remember some "old geezer" shouting out of the window of a passing car,"Take a shower". Somehow, I believe an "old geezer" on a chariot said the same thing.
 
If you watch re-runs of old TV shows, the men almost always wore suits. Today the casual look knows no limits.
 
If you watch re-runs of old TV shows, the men almost always wore suits. Today the casual look knows no limits.
I am a big fan of the series, "The Untouchables." It's Elliot Ness fighting crime in the 1930s. I get a kick out of all those criminal low lives type of men all wearing expensive suits and all wearing ties. LOL
 

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I am a big fan of the series, "The Untouchables." It's Elliot Ness fighting crime in the 1930s. I get a kick out of all those criminal low lives type of men all wearing expensive suits and all wearing ties. LOL

I like the way people dress on the old Perry Mason shows as well.
 
As my son says, "there's a pot for every lid". What you find distasteful, another will find attractive. I say, "Let the Good Times Roll".

and note to OP - yes, you are getting uglier every year. :ROFLMAO: Me too.
lol I have never heard the expression "there's a pot for every lid" it's kind of cute... :D
 


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