A Birthday Celebrated

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Consider this a catch-up post, an announcement of the rewards sent out from my birthday post as well as a few misc thoughts. Sorry it's taken me so long to tally up the rewards from that post. I seem to always be a bit behind. But I always catch up eventually!

In that post I announced that I was going to give out 45 HSBI, one for each year of my age, either given to 45 commenters or divided up among those who did comment. Unfortunately I didn't get 45 comments. I think most people see the title involves a birthday and don't bother to click into it. Ah, I probably don't have 45 people who regularly read my posts anyway. Ah well—it was a hope!


Image by StockSnap from Pixabay

So what I am doing is this. Everyone who commented on that post is getting 1 SBI. And the people who went above and beyond by giving long comments answered my questions, I'm dividing up the rest of the HSBI among you guys equally.

That means 1 SBI to @noopu @mastergerund @silversaver888 @mdasein @sirdelly @koto-art @daveks @pulubengdugs @littlebee4 @bozz @trumpman @thealliance @pocketechange

That leaves 32 HSBI for @dkid14 @dfinney @consciouscat @ladymisa @blitzzzz @boxcarblue @agreste @opidia — which very conveniently divides out evening, giving you all 4 HSBI each.

Thank you, everyone, for the well wishes and great comments. I really enjoyed reading all of them.

So I guess I'm 45 and a week or so now. Moving into my 46th year on this planet has been.... pretty much the same. No big changes yet! I suppose next time I go to the doctor they may give me new tests and checks that my age qualifies me for, but I haven't done that yet.

As we age, I think we get a broader sense of just how short history is. When I was a kid, for example, I had a personal connection to WWII because my grandfather fought in it so it felt real and connected to me. I could somewhat imagine WWI, The Great War, because that would have been my grandpa's parents generation, although that was a bit unclear. Beyond that...? Ancient history. The American Civil War, for instance, might as well have been a fictional story. It didn't feel entirely real when I was a kid. It was so long ago, I felt, I just couldn't imagine it.

Then many years ago I was watching the Ken Burns documentary, The Civil War and he included footage from both the 50 year anniversary of that war in 1913 and the 75th anniversary in 1938. Seeing FDR giving a speech and old men who fought in that war shaking hands just blew my mind a little. Here I had two bubbles in my mind, one for the WWII era and FDR and another for the American Civil War era which still felt just a little fake to me. Previously these bubbles were separate but suddenly they were overlapping and I was just a little amazed.

As George put it, worlds were colliding!

Well, not with the disastrous results that plagued poor George. Rather it opened my young mind and started to give me a sense of just how short our modern history is. Here is some footage from that 1938 event. It starts with a speech by FDR and includes footage of the old vets from the war.

(You can find lots of better footage on YouTube if you want to go on a searching adventure.)

A few years ago my oldest son asked me about WWII. As I answered his questions, I found myself thinking that he is just about as far removed from WWII as my grandfather was from the American Civil War. That thought really put things into perspective. Just as my son might meet WWII vets, tho their number is rapidly dwindling, my grandpa would have been able to meet Civil War vets when he was alive. From there it's not that much of a leap to think that when some of those Civil War vets were kids, they may have bumped into veterans of the American Revolution. And just like that, I am connected to the beginning of America in just a few short leaps.

At Kottke.org he posts about this same thing occasionally, calling it "The Great Span", referring to how when we measure in lifetimes of people, events that seem very distant suddenly become much closer, showing us how short history really is. He's written about it a lot, just follow this link if you want to find some of his posts on it.

Here's an excellent piece talking about the same thing. He follows back in history, starting with the recent death of historian Arthur Schlesinger.

Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr., one the United States' great historians, is less than two lifetimes removed from a world where the United States did not exist. Through Mr. Schlesinger, you're no more than three away yourself. That's how short the history of our nation really is.

It's really a great piece.

But entering my 46th year, I also find myself looking ahead. Advancements have been speeding up. We now have the first hints of the AI revolution to come. As my friend @bozz likes to point out, ChatGPT isn't real AI, it's just a language model. But a language model that gives us a taste of what is to come and what will probably be here sooner than we think, within just a few years. @themarkymark gave me this amazing read not too long ago which talks about how quickly progress is speeding up. Well worth the read.

Kurzweil suggests that the progress of the entire 20th century would have been achieved in only 20 years at the rate of advancement in the year 2000—in other words, by 2000, the rate of progress was five times faster than the average rate of progress during the 20th century. He believes another 20th century’s worth of progress happened between 2000 and 2014 and that another 20th century’s worth of progress will happen by 2021, in only seven years. A couple decades later, he believes a 20th century’s worth of progress will happen multiple times in the same year, and even later, in less than one month. All in all, because of the Law of Accelerating Returns, Kurzweil believes that the 21st century will achieve 1,000 times the progress of the 20th century.

(again the Ecency preview isn't working very well... If the above paragraph doesn't show up as a blockquote, it is one from the linked article)

Is that doesn't blow your mind, I don't know what will. Just in the next decade the world might look completely different. It'll be a wild ride. Unless we do something dumb and kill ourselves. That would suck. But that has always been a danger, especially since the development of atomic bombs.

So, yeah, that's my first few steps beyond my birthday: my awareness of the shortness of the past rapidly expanding and my anticipation for the future increasing.

Hi there! David LaSpina is an American photographer and translator lost in Japan, trying to capture the beauty of this country one photo at a time and searching for the perfect haiku.


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29 comments
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It will be for sure a wild ride… in a couple of months I reach the same age.
The world is changing fast lately.
We should once in a while think about those things. Very interesting. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and the time after your birthday 😊🥳

Thank you so much for the SBI much appreciated!
Have a wonderful mid week 👋🏻😊
!PIZZA
!ALIVE
!LOL

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Forty Five! Congrats man! Time for your first colonoscopy now. They moved the age back from 50, didn't you hear? Don't worry though, the prep is the worst part. Trust me! 😃 Those are definitely some interesting things to think about. Time just keeps going faster and faster. Congrats to those who got the HSBI shares if you are reading this trust me when I say those are invaluable to your growth here. Share the wealth when you can. It pays dividends.

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haha oh yeah, so many medical checks to look forward to...

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It's a blast, let me tell you! I have to go back again in five years. :P

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I must have missed your post, as I would have ABSOLUTELY wished you HBD! Many happy returns, and may your five years headed up to the big 5.0 be amazing.

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It is still time ;)

i did some astro readings because he deserves it 🩷

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Thank you 😃 Let's see what I manage to do before that big mark.

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🤩 Thanks! !PGM

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Looking forward to your 46th birthday😁

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I just wanted to say Omedetou on that day because your photo looked good with your pretty kid! I didn’t expect this but thank you for your kindness! Again, たんじょう日おめでとう〜🎂

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We are greeting you in this old age ...:D
when you 90 ...it will feel super young 🌼

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I bet that 90 year old mark will be here before I know it!

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There is a lot happening in this post! 😄

First, thank you for the SBI and happy 45 and a weekish birthday!

Second, Ken Burns documentaries are the best.

You talk about the passing of time, the shortness of “modern” history. How close we actually are to things that seem like a distant past. I think about these things a lot. My grandfathers also fought in WWII. One of their fathers (my great grandfather) fought in WWI and his father (my great great grandfather) was a soldier for the Union Army during the Civil War. His brother (who was also my great great grandfather… #cousinmarriage) was a soldier for the Confederate Army and his in-laws (my great great great grandparents owned a plantation and slaves!

160 years is not a long time, but so much information and experience gets lost to history. One because people don’t care to pay attention to what is shared at school. So we have huge swaths of people completely uneducated. But also people don’t pay attention or learn or maybe share their own family’s stories.

I recently stayed with my dad’s cousin. She is 83 years old. Her generation, my dad’s generation won’t be around too much longer. In my 4 day visit the cousin told me SO MANY crazy things about our family. Things I never knew.

For example her father was a naval commander on a submarine. Their family was stationed in Shanghai (I think) as WWII began and the Japanese invaded. My great aunt (with her first born child) had to go into hiding when the Japanese occupied the city and was smuggled out during an escape mission organized by the US Navy. During the war my great uncle commanded the Char (a submarine) that sank a Japanese vessel called the Isuzu. The entire mission was classified for decades. After the war the family ended up in Norway and he was the US representative to NATO and was apparently close to John McCain’s dad.

🤯

These are people I knew. People who were still alive when I was a teenager. My grandpa (brother to the aunty who escaped from Shanghai) was still alive in 2006. And here I was hearing these stories in 2023!

And all I could think was, all of this would be lost if she never told me. Plus, how many other things happened over the course of their lives did we never hear about? I am just living my life, working in a cube. Surfing the internet. While my family was owning slaves or escaping a war zone. It is crazy.

Anyway, this is A LOT of babbling on your post. 😂🤣 But I am turning 49 tomorrow so share your thoughts on where we have been and the speed of the advancements ahead. 🙂

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Great stories! Yeah, it's too bad history isn't shared. I have a cassette tape of my grandparents telling about their hometown when they were kids. In it they mention more than once how they are sure no one will care about their stories because they are old and boring. Then recently my folks were cleaning their house, throwing away a lot of stuff. I hear it's a trend these days, with older people cleaning up so their their kids won't have to when they die. Anyway, my folks threw away a ton of older photos of their grandparents and great grandparents. I asked why and my mom said "Oh, you don't care about any of that old stuff". Sadly, I think that attitude is present everywhere these days. I know virtually nothing of my dad's family or their history. When I ask him, my dad just blows it off, saying he doesn't know anything.

Luckily one of my uncles on my mom's said is very interested in genealogy and so he has mapped our family back several generations and has published several family books. His brothers and sister thing he's crazy, but I'm glad he's doing that. On my dad's side his sister was just starting to do that, but she died before she could finish much.

Glad you could hear so many interesting stories of your family history recently! And happy birthday to you too!!

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