• @[email protected]
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    72 days ago

    When i was young i could sleep on a staircase and walk off next day as if nothing happened.

    But now i sleep on pillow with slight angle and the next day is hell with neck and mid back pain.

    Also alcohol tolerance reduced

    • @[email protected]
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      110 hours ago

      I feel both of these. I’m 40 and yeah, sleeping slightly weirdly I get shoulder pain the next day. Working out regularly has definitely helped things. Also for alcohol, I have to be careful to also include non-alcoholic drinks in an evening, say a non-alcoholic beer or something before the real thing.

  • @[email protected]
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    153 days ago

    I have to keep scrolling further and further back every year on age verification for websites.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      If the website only uses two digit years, eventually you’ll hit a time where you don’t need to scroll at all.

  • @[email protected]
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    93 days ago

    These are all cute, but when you start to lose your balance just turning your head or with basic movements, you really start to feel old.

    It’s only a matter of time before you start falling.

    Once you start falling, you start dying slowly

  • MochiGoesMeow
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    173 days ago

    Feeling confident without makeup.

    Realizing that the pillars of success written by governments or institutions is bullshit and caring more about good people.

    Feeling comfortable with a small social bubble. Quality over quantity.

    Valuing naps over parties. 😴

  • @RememberTheApollo_
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    233 days ago

    You don’t feel older mentally, but your body starts to betray you. I don’t mean stuff like your legs aching after getting up when sitting on the floor, or getting tired easier; it’s the subtle things that really are irritating. Like taking longer to learn something. Getting fatter even though you don’t really think your diet is bad. Taking longer to find that word you can’t think of or the name of that person, movie, place, whatever.

    The irritations that add up are the ones that you don’t really expect, not just the ones you do like needing glasses.

    Then there’s “time.” Fucking day goes too quick. Used to be you felt like you could get all kinds of shit done in a day. Now? Run two errands and half the day is gone. Wtf.

    Also, “lasts”.

    You start to realize that there are things approaching that are the last time you’ll see or do something. The last time you visit where you grew up. Last time your kid lived at home. Last car you’ll ever own.

    Yeah, the lasts suck.

    • @[email protected]
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      73 days ago

      Also, “lasts”.

      You start to realize that there are things approaching that are the last time you’ll see or do something. The last time you visit where you grew up. Last time your kid lived at home. Last car you’ll ever own.

      Yeah, the lasts suck.

      I remember being in college, and this Onion article gave me a little bit of an existential crisis.

    • socsa
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      3 days ago

      The weight gain is really the big sign shit is going down hill. I’ve been making a series of changes since about age 35, and each time the new diet or exercise routine works for like a year or two and then the weight slowly creeps back up. At this point I literally ride a bike 200 miles per week and I will still gain weight slowly if I eat breakfast. It makes no sense.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 days ago

        It sucks. I like breakfast! On the bright side, two cups of coffee and I am not hungry for the next two hours and by then it is almost lunch time so I guess it works out. Brunch it is!

  • Scrubbles
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    654 days ago

    Holidays are a blur. I don’t remember individual years anymore, and every year I’m started at how quickly it became Christmas already.

    Ffs we’re halfway through February already. I was just putting up the tree like 3 days ago.

  • @[email protected]
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    314 days ago

    Time feels way faster as you get older.

    It’s also pretty grim that the people you know are either dying, dead, or have a life altering illness that comes out of nowhere. I feel like there’s a funeral in my family once a month, rather than once every decade.

    • @CleoTheWizard
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      73 days ago

      Hot take but I think it’s because people stop having or seeking out novel experiences. Most of people’s lives are repetitive and boring jobs with barely any time to zone out in the evening. And once your kids move out and you’re with a long term partner, hardly anything is dynamic in your life. Or fresh. Or unexpected.

  • @[email protected]
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    294 days ago

    I don’t distrohop or tinker with my Linux install anymore. I just install Linux Mint XFCE edition and don’t even bother changing the background.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      20+ years ago i spent hours each day developing my own lcars interface based on enlightenment; now i just use whatever x-windows environment the distro i’m using at the moment defaults to.

      we must be twins separated at birth. lol

    • CarrotsHaveEars
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      23 days ago

      Me too. But I stopped hopping ten years ago and settled down on Alpine, Void, or Gentoo, based on how fancy the hardware is, and the use case.

      To me, the hopping part relates more to tinkering and fine-tuning. Today I prefer things just work. I wish no down time on all my devices and servers, because who has time to figure out why my photo doesn’t sync to my NAS, or dig up that piece of paper when my password manager does not respond because of the proxy service is down?

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      Tech also just isn’t advancing and changing as much as it was when we were younger so it’s not as exciting anymore

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        And when it does change it’s to enshittify it. It’s been a decade since I was excited about any new technology. I used to love it too.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        I don’t think this is true.

        It’s not exciting to me any more because I hate the way it’s changing the world.

        In the 2010s it felt like tech would save us.

        • @[email protected]
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          03 days ago

          I think it is stagnating. people having more access to technology based gadgets but the only thing that changed is earth abuse to support production of gadgets. So not only is it not saving us, it is literally killing us.

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        I don’t get that at all. To me it feels like there’s so much progress happening right now.

  • Random_Character_A
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    153 days ago
    • At 30 you reach the peak.
    • At 40 you start to have small health problems that don’t go away and are mostly annoyance.
    • At 50 you seek help because it’s more than annoyance. You get your first permanent medication.
    • At 60 it’s somewhat limiting and for the first time causing Intermediate pain.
    • At 70 it’s debilitating and pain is a familiar companion. You might have your first seizures.
    • At 80 if it hasn’t killed you yet, it soon will. You are probably an invalid or close to it.
    • At 90 if you are still hanging on, you are waiting for death and welcoming it.

    That’s pretty much it, ±10 years.

    • @mudmaniac
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      23 days ago

      If you spend most of your teenage and adult years over the weight of 220 pounds you can move your timetable ahead 10 - 15 years. Permanent medication at 30 or 40, debilitating pain especially in the knees at 45, heart problems anytime from 40-60, welcoming death at 80,

      • @[email protected]
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        43 days ago

        That is what I “always” thought, motorcycling will get me and I wouldn’t want to live without being able to ride … but then it happens, you don’t and you get to live with what you never though you would be. …

        Some friend came along today and had Frank Sinatra “my way” playing for a ring, immediately I searched the tube and found Sid Vicious’ “my way” and played it back … he never got old. I guess they can take our lives away but we get to keep the mind young if we want… and look back to see if we are happy with choices, even the worst mistakes.

        The weirdest feeling is that the older you get the more you feel time is accelerating … you get older faster and faster after a certain age.

        • Random_Character_A
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          21 day ago

          Yeah. It feels like the brain processes memories and their durations in relation to experienced total. When you are 5, one year is 20% of your life and feel like eternity. When you are 50 it’s 2% of your life and goes by pretty quick.

  • @LaunchesKayaks
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    234 days ago

    Nobody mistakes me for a teenager anymore.

    Kids call me “lady”

    I want to go to bed at 9 PM

    I get excited for new appliances