Terminalcoffee discussion
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Feeling Nostalgic? The archives
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What have you had forever that still works? (Blanky/Blinkie)
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I agree Larry, I kind of hope that the disposable consumerism that we had is mostly over.

On the other hand, the riding lawnmower I bought last year is flimsy as hell and probably won't last more than four years.

I've had my car (Toyota) for 10 years now. It's paid-in-full... and still runs like a champ. :)


feeling you Dan - new lawn mowers are disposable junk

My stove is also from the 60s. I keep wanting it to break so I can get a gas model, but aside from one burner, it's still working fine.
I also have a mixer from the early 60s that's just working fine. And my mower is 19 years old.
They just don't make em like they used to!


Half of my furniture is hand-me-downs from mom, and, again, older than I am. It's hard to wear out a dresser.



Our dryer is 27 years old, we have a freezer that is 26 years old, and our push mower I have had 22 years, but I bought it used.
Just had to replace the water softener that was 25 years old.
Just had to replace the water softener that was 25 years old.

Chris wrote: "Yeah, with my first effort I figured I'd try to be short, funny, and gross. ...
Well then you succeeded
welcome to TC Chris.
Well then you succeeded
welcome to TC Chris.


"Raised" and "softly" are a couple of descriptors, I guess.

We just traded our big behemoth Suburban for a 2004 VW Passat, which we have decided to keep unitl the wheels fall off. It's the first time I've really found that line of thought useful. I guess I'm a gen-X kid who loves new, shiny stuff... but I'm gettin old enough to appreciate something to hang on to it for a long time.

1. Red-handled scissors. I brought these with me to college. I remember packing these proudly into a second-grade pencil pouch. There was a lot of satisfaction in having a complete set: gluestick, 3 pencils, a sharpener, eraser, ruler, scissors, 16-box of crayola. Happiness was so simple back then. : )
2. Backpack. I've had the same backpack now for eight years? Possibly a little more. Used it every day in high school, and still do. I've taken it with me everywhere I've gone: Mexico, Canada, Korea, New York, Berkeley. I can't believe there was a time I got a new one every year.




Edit: Do you see this, N.? You're loved.

Thank you for your encouragement and kindness.
I really do appreciate it.
I just kind of suck at receiving such nice words sometimes....
"Aw, shucks"? ^^;;
<3

I have a houseplant that is a cutting from one my dad's baby brother gave my mom for Christmas the first year they were married, in 1971.
Things that were new when I acquired them: The 1999 Honda Civic hatchback (love it still!), the stereo that was a Christmas gift from mom and dad in 1989 (has a record player, a dual cassette deck, and an equalizer), the 200-disc CD jukebox from 2000, the curtains my mom and I made in 1999, and the coffee table/blanket chest my dad made for me in 1997. I bought the 13" TV used from my brother in 1999, and that was my only television until two months ago, when my boyfriend gave me his old one (I've never bought a new television).
I have a 1967 off-white acrylic sweater-knit minidress that was my mom's. My suede jacket is from approximately the same era, though it came from a thrift shop. I have four wide-collared button shirts from the 1970s, a handful of t-shirts from the 1980s, and a green cardigan sweater I bought in 1990.
The house is 1904, but I rent, sadly.
Edit: Oh! How could I forget the blankies? I have a rainbow-striped bed-sized afghan that my grandma made for my parents when I was just a baby, and a purple one that she made for me when I started college in 1992. The baby quilt from my crib is still in my blanket chest, but doesn't see much use.


@Jackie: I thought we'd agreed not to mention the Rubik's Cube again?
@Lylly: I still have two pieces of a seven-piece, wheel-less luggage set that I used to transport the remains of my life in South Africa to Holland more than 22 years ago. I recently wrote a short story about it. Will post it once it has been published. It begins as follows:
"Brother Niftistow was lost in the dead of night on the icy hairpin pass between Liberec and Rokytnice nad Yizerou in the high north of the Czech Republic. Tired and frozen, he must have slipped off the roof and tumbled down a steep embankment, spilling tools along the way until he struck a tree and sank slowly into the pristine snow."


This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Anyway, since we moved to Wisconsin twelve years ago, and moved in together, oh, sixteen years ago (eek, that sounds like a long time) a lot of what we own is, well, pretty old. But some things still work, day in and day out, to the point where I take them for granted, like...
1. The tea kettle that I've used pretty much every day for fifteen years.
2. The andirondack (sp?) chairs we put on our front porch about ten years ago.
3. The refrigerator we've had for twelve years and should probably replace before it implodes.
Oh, I think this topic emerged because of my car's breakdown after thirteen years. Anyway, this got me thinking about quality, purchases, etc...the idea that some things last a long time.
I don't know where the hell I'm headed with this.
But...
And...you?