Well, for the purposes of doing the projects, it was the easiest place to get to from Maryland. It's a few hours away; you can make a long weekend out of it. My parents enjoyed it in the 80s. My dad is very much the type of person who likes to walk around and look at stuff. Epcot...man walks through every shop. During Festival of the Arts...every art tent. Drives me batty, but I'm old enough that I can take B and leave. But I digress. For the purpose of learning something and for it being interactive, it was good. I still remember a conversation with one of the workers there, because like with Disney, they stay in character. It was in a wig shop, and I remember her saying she was horrified at another guest who said she shaved her legs rather than her head. I remember looking at my friend and the two of us giggling. That stuck with me; I always remembered about wigs. I realized it was mostly fake, but I do remember learning something. And of course, with B and his autism, he probably learned more that way with it being interactive then he did any other way. The second time, I also remember that there were some cats I made friends with. That was about the time my mom started nicknaming me "cat magnet"; I can go up to pretty much any cat that isn't completely feral and make friends.I'm sure that it has some value in the historic narrative, but if you go to see something that is historically intact then Williamsburg is not the place. I went when my kids were young, and frankly they have never mentioned what they felt about it or what it taught them, so I don't really know. All I saw was a place that was hyped up and almost thought of a relic of the past to be not much more then a "this is what it would have looked like back then, but the original building doesn't exist anymore, we just built this to show you".
I am a history buff to some degree and I was genuinely excited about going there until I got there and found out the it was nothing more then basically a movie set. One that is supposed to give the feel, which it does, but not the reality of authenticity. They were all copies of something that supposedly existed around the time of the revolution. Also, I paid money to get in and half way through found out that I could have parked on the street just adjacent to the themed park and just walked in free of charge. Some of the interiors would have been missed, but to my mind if is wasn't the actual, historically linked interior it wasn't worth the extra money to see it anyway.
To be honest though I wasn't all that impressed with the 80's version of Bush Gardens either. I apparently am very hard to please.
I was just very fortunate that I didn't graduate in the middle of a recession. I graduated, thankfully, in the middle of a high point. Still, what was frustrating was that everywhere they wanted experience for entry level positions. So...you wanted me to have experience before I could get experience? I had internships, which is how I was eventually able to get hired as a contractor, and that's how I was able to get hired...but then my company wiped out half their IT department, and then I got that unfortunate diagnosis. And I couldn't apply for unemployment, because I couldn't work. And I didn't qualify for disability. And I was on my parents' insurance, which was a high deductible plan, and we hadn't met the deductible. So there went a bunch of my savings. Thankfully, because I had experience, I got hired pretty quickly, and now I'm considered essential, but still, it was not an easy process. And I still can't afford to live on my own in this area yet, though I'm working on it.Exactly. In my lifetime my son has lived through three stock market crashes including this years. The most disconcerting was while he and my DD were in college. While they both graduated the job market sucked and most of their elders were eating up the enter level job markets, 50 somethings absorbing all the teenage job markets 2 and 3 fold. Many mocking the young as lazy. There just wasn't anything in the recession when they graduated. 50 somethings were selling calendars at malls, something that in the past was a teen job or bagging groceries at local markets. Once being teen jobs. It was a rough time to be a new adult. Both of my kids were fortunate to fall back upon long employment of their youth until better things to come availed. They eventually came out the backside well but it was a long time coming. I don't regret my insistence that they become formally educated. It is as important in today's job market as a high school education was to my parents generation where high school drop outs were prevalent. If you lack the proper certified credentials today you are stuck where you are at with little options in other firms. The HS degree is rarely enough to make yourself marketable forever, a gamble often lost. College was instilled in them from babes cause that is where the world went. Yesteryear only had elementary school education, then HS, now University. The world evolved. Those who didn't....well.
I have really been enjoying your flower pictures. Thank you!Some daffodil pictures. One from yesterday when the weather was nice. The others are from today, I cut a few to enjoy while it was rain/snow/ sleeting.
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I have really been enjoying your flower pictures. Thank you!
The weather has been gorgeous the past two days! View attachment 460953
Well, they were a bunch of fine feathered friends -- took off when the going got tough.
We'll have to find new pets for Donna. What about a bird? Ever seen this one flying around near your house?
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I think we need EVERYONE....all kinds of education. We need college educated people like engineers and doctors, but we also need tradesmen like carpenters, plumbers, mechanics. It's an oversight when we take either for granted or when we don't value one as much as the other. Sure, doctors save lives they couldn't save without their education, but they wouldn't have a place to do that if not for carpenters and plumbers, etc, and they couldn't stay running without receptionists and food service and repairmen. And I don't understand the pay discrepency....we couldn't get by without any one of them, yet some of them are paid peanuts and others have an abundance. We take some of them for granted. They are ALL important.I disagree. Kids who go to trade school can potentially make double what kids who go to college make, with less debt and more upward trajectory.
I think we need EVERYONE....all kinds of education. We need college educated people like engineers and doctors, but we also need tradesmen like carpenters, plumbers, mechanics. It's an oversight when we take either for granted or when we don't value one as much as the other. Sure, doctors save lives they couldn't save without their education, but they wouldn't have a place to do that if not for carpenters and plumbers, etc, and they couldn't stay running without receptionists and food service and repairmen. And I don't understand the pay discrepency....we couldn't get by without any one of them, yet some of them are paid peanuts and others have an abundance. We take some of them for granted. They are ALL important.
But the price of gas, though...View attachment 461001
People always post photos of this Cincinnati gas station. They have clever signs quite often.
Oh I know....I was agreeing with you, but kind of adding why I think that's true, I guess? Sorry...I wasn't really clear. I just think it's sad that we don't always appreciate all fields. We get caught up in social status or whatever and we forget that it takes a village. And the current situation is forcing us to look at that, too with what's considered "essential". People need the truck driver to deliver the TP and the grocery store stock people to get it on the shelves, and the cashier to ring it up. But I bet if you asked people 6 months ago who was "more important": a doctor or a truck driver, most people would say doctor. Now we're seeing just how valuable those lower pay grade workers are. And it doesn't make the doctor less important or valuable, but I HOPE we're learning to value MORE people than we did before.Oh I agree!! I was just saying I didn't agree the previous poster that the only way to be successful in life was to go to college![]()
Stop.....buying....books?? Now that's just crazy talk! Blasphemy! You take that back!!!
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