I have seen toys, in museums, just like things I played with as a child in the 1950s and 60s, and that my children played with in the 1980s and 90s.
History is happening all around and through us.
Seeing things from the past can trigger stories that might never have been told without the presence of those artifacts. I missed the days of radio dramas and serials. By the time I was listening to radio, it was all music. The stories had moved to the TV. All of my older relatives had radio stories—of war news, comedy routines, inspiring speeches and of mystery stories presented in several voices, and with sound effects.
We still want stories, news, humor and inspiration, but the sources change, and will change some more.
Antiques elsewhere here
photo by Sandra Dodd
I wrote this four days ago (what's above). Three days ago, I started listening to
So, Anyway...: A Memoir by John Cleese (read by the author, who is best known as a member of Monty Python). He has talked about radio shows four times in eight chapters, telling stories of his childhood memories, and of radio producers who seemed to think, when television was new, that TV would not supplant radio programs.
Knowing this post was ready to go made those stories seem like magical coincidence to me. Jung called those coincidences "synchronicity."