▲ | NemoNobody 3 days ago | |
Ahh, you e touched on a big problem with our society rn - nothing is worth doing. I've been really thinking about lawns lately and how much time men and women spend maintaining them, how much pride many of them have in such activity... lawns aren't real tho, it's just a personal park nobody ever uses that we all thought we wanted bc rich ppl had them. Front lawns especially, just for looks, nobody normal ever sits on them even. Case in point is all the people that live in an apartment - they don't do lawns. They might think they want to and some might even enjoy up keeping a lawn but it's not an activity that's "worth it" in fact there are many reasons not have a lawn, it isn't an activity that justifies itself as so many pretend. Everything is like that. Almost nothing any of us do adds to humanities' general progress or improves our own situations even. Mowing a lawn and watching TV are incredibly similar activities if you have a nice lawnmower. | ||
▲ | keiferski 3 days ago | parent | next [-] | |
I actually think there are mental benefits to cutting the lawn. There is something zen about slowly reducing the grass in an ordered manner. | ||
▲ | sourcepluck 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |
I've had very similar thoughts about lawn-cutting, but hadn't related it to technology-related trends! I couldn't agree more. In a broad sense, it's like we've lost contact with our own lives, communities, and cultures. I don't think those things are "dead", but they mean things now which are totally different than what they meant even only a couple of decades ago, and the people living through it sort of know that and kind of say it out loud sometimes even, but can't really wrap their heads around it at the same time and continue to ape the old behaviours (no offence, anyone, I do it too). "Traditions" live on in a sort of zombie state... we cut the grass, we present the gift cards. It's an odd and fun(ny) moment to be alive. |