• Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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    9 hours ago

    2025… IT doesn’t feel real as the current year, I legitimately odn’t understand how I’m still alive. I feel like an aged immortal being that was there at the dawn of man and has watched him fail to approach anything resembling a true Gilded Age, and now I crave death to see a world beyond the material, to be free from my captors, and ascend to greater things.

    I’m 33

  • volodymyr@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    I am on the contrary quite comforted by this. Easier to make sense of things, tackle or accept things that don’t make sense.

    Lots of difficulties behind, making current and future ones seem manageable.

    Growing old is not that bad.

  • fosho@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    why do so many people put the punchline at the start of the joke?

    • FundMECFSResearch@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      I’m not sure how scientific that is in terms of how the brain actually works — I mean it’s a network of neurons that adjust connections, not a hard drive that can be filled or emptied…

      But I love how much I relate to your anecdote — It just feels like it makes sense — because we really do perceive time to pass faster as we age.

      • RedditWanderer@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I was just summing up a concept I remembered from somewhere. If we’re going to get specific about it, it’s called Weber’s Law, there’s an interesting numberphile video about it about the rate of change, and our experience with different levels of stimulus where the required “ratio” to feel a difference remains the same, which essentially means it takes more to notice the more experiences we’ve had in total. It wasnt an anecdote either, it was a metaphor for that concept / law regarding life experiences. It’s a very real thing.

        It being neurons reinforcing connections doesn’t mean there isnt a rate of change, and my example in no way implies there’s a hard drive (nor does Webers law)

        Edit: it’s also interesting because it’s the answer to the question of “how much can they shrink the candy bar before we notice?”.

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    On average, every 120 years, the entire human population is renewed

    Everyone in the entire world alive today, on average wasn’t around 120 years ago

    And in 120 years from now (on average and depending on how well we develop new medical technologies) everyone, including you and me, will all be gone and forgotten.

      • Scrollone@feddit.it
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        9 hours ago

        So that’s the important part. Don’t be an anonymous human. Leave something for future people to remember your fleeting life.

  • marcos@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Nah, you have to compress everything since 2000 in a single line, and make 2020 take all of the rest of it.

  • Brewchin@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Now do January 2025.

    The IRL version of the used car salesman meme: “(Slaps roof) We can fit so many months inside this bad boy…”