Hey, just wait till their kids want to collect "doillies" or something...lol. Boy will they be surprised!What's different is that most young people aren't interested in this stuff, just as our generation wasn't interested in owning things from the 1880s.
They have a right to not want or value what we wanted or valued.
The difference may be that most people born and raised before WWII had very few material possessions, the I got an orange in my stocking for Christmas generations. While the people born and raised in the years following WWII had many many more material possessions. The older generations valued stuff and the newer generations have sort of overdosed on stuff or realize that if they need something it's just a few mouse clicks away. At least that's a theory!Well, what IS different?
I understand fully Leann. I went through that too. .. I'm past the big house/yard and years of collected family belongings now. Everything is gone or found a new home. Sold the property and have started a new chapter after losing my husband. As I moved to my apartment with bare essentials and just enough furniture and small things that make me smile, my two daughters informed me that when I die they will just open the door and tell people to help themselves. How's that?My sister has two adult sons. The sons have told my sister and her husband that they don't want any of the "junk" (as they call it) and if there comes a time when they inherit it, they'll just throw it out. They didn't say it as bluntly as I have put it here but they did make it known that they just don't want the mountains of things. My daughters feel much the same about my stuff. I have offered many things to them over and again and I get the same "no, you keep it Mom, it looks nice in your house".
People to whom I have discussed this theme, either in person or through social media, have been shocked when they tell their children that will be inheriting their possession only to be told their kids don't want it. I shudder to think every day how many valuable items are put in a dumpster because they are unwanted or the family just can't be bothered to find a buyer or collector.
...I wish she had taken all that money she spent on things no one wants anymore and invested it in CDs (not compact disks).
Photos are not as precious to the young as they were to us. Who needs an old fashioned photo album, slides, or any of the rest of it?
In addition to all the changes that have been mentioned in this discussion, there are also big changes to our lifestyles brought about by technology. I have mentioned elsewhere on this forum the big project I've just completed, of wading through all the thousands of slides my late husband left. They are a lovely record of our family history, at least starting with him and me, but who looks at slides any more? I've picked out about 700 of the best ones, nearly all of people, not scenery, and had them digitized and put on DVD's at Costco. I am giving them to my kids and grandkids, hoping they will treasure these memories and will keep the DVD's, as at least they are compact and easy to take with them when they move. But I realize that even those things will become obsolete. Maybe all pictures will be kept on "the cloud" or some other form of electronic memory.
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I know what you mean, Sunny. I have my parents photo album and the one they stared for me when I was born. I am an only child and never married or had my own childrem. Who would even be interested in these photos?