I really do think it's a serious deficit of face-to-face and ear-to-ear communication. Plus brain-wiring divergences which seem to have spread like fall funguses.
Plus children's literature has become very much less imaginative and cartoons and comics these days are moral sermons instead of gloriously rude wordplay.
I really do think it's a serious deficit of face-to-face and ear-to-ear communication. Plus brain-wiring divergences which seem to have spread like fall funguses.
Plus children's literature has become very much less imaginative and cartoons and comics these days are moral sermons instead of gloriously rude wordplay.
More than one reason, most likely, in not developing the sense of humor that comes from self-examination. However, the inane preponderances from the young adults in my extended family are still laughed at with loud, great hilarity and shouts of тАЬyouтАЩll learn.тАЭ Plus, to date, none of us have been cut off from contact as in the latest trend by young adults with their тАЬpsychologistsтАЭ. I have hope.
I can remember being laughed at by adults when I was at that young and tiresomely earnest and self-righeous stage. Now of course I'm the one laughing. It remains extremely hard to grow up. But of course the emotional state of infancy seems to be unwarrantedly extended these days.
I really do think it's a serious deficit of face-to-face and ear-to-ear communication. Plus brain-wiring divergences which seem to have spread like fall funguses.
Plus children's literature has become very much less imaginative and cartoons and comics these days are moral sermons instead of gloriously rude wordplay.
Aka...Heckle and Jeckle. Those magpies were keen observers and masters of "rude wordplay."
And Bugs Bunny. We who grew up with Looney Tunes and Terrytoon Circus and Merrie Melodies didn't know how fortunate we were at the time.
More than one reason, most likely, in not developing the sense of humor that comes from self-examination. However, the inane preponderances from the young adults in my extended family are still laughed at with loud, great hilarity and shouts of тАЬyouтАЩll learn.тАЭ Plus, to date, none of us have been cut off from contact as in the latest trend by young adults with their тАЬpsychologistsтАЭ. I have hope.
I can remember being laughed at by adults when I was at that young and tiresomely earnest and self-righeous stage. Now of course I'm the one laughing. It remains extremely hard to grow up. But of course the emotional state of infancy seems to be unwarrantedly extended these days.
I agree.