05-20-2018, 09:55 AM
@"Dark Dustinvgmaster" My experience has been the opposite - usually it's older people who express the most desire to return to the recent past. (Of course, it's true that there have long been people who romanticized past ages - for example, the days of the ancient Greeks or the Roman Empire, or the medieval period - but I haven't met a lot of people who sincerely wished they were living in the Middle Ages or in ancient Sparta.)
@Pedigree I think that's the healthiest attitude to have. Some things change for the better, and some things change for the worse, but you'll be happiest - and most able to have a positive effect on the world - if you can adapt to a changing environment instead of living in the past or fantasizing about a future that may or may not happen the way you hope.
@Pedigree I think that's the healthiest attitude to have. Some things change for the better, and some things change for the worse, but you'll be happiest - and most able to have a positive effect on the world - if you can adapt to a changing environment instead of living in the past or fantasizing about a future that may or may not happen the way you hope.
Course clear! You got a card.
![[Image: CourseClear.gif]](https://dl.dropbox.com/s/d5mcpm4nmt0gd14/CourseClear.gif)
![[Image: CourseClear.gif]](https://dl.dropbox.com/s/d5mcpm4nmt0gd14/CourseClear.gif)