I don’t post every week. You might have noticed. So it was with some surprise that I noted my post counter showed my previous one was the 64th.
Sixty-four?
Being of a certain age, echoes of an old Beatles’ song always sound when I hear that number. (“When I’m Sixty-Four“). I also remember that sixty-four is the square of eight and the cube of four. (Yes, I was bloody good at maths.)
Being also inquisitive, I googled the number.
- An early computer was the Commodore 64 (I remember that one.)
- Year 64 (LXIV) was a leap year starting on Sunday (Useful for pub-quizzes.)
- 64 is the sum of Euler’s totient function for the first fourteen integers. (No, I don’t understand that, either.)
It starts to look as though 64 is an exotic number. But it isn’t. It’s very mundane.
I know, because I became 64 in September.
Luckily, I inherited my hair from my mother’s side. Still a full head, or at least 95%. Sadly, my teeth came from my father’s side, and a much lower percentage remains intact. And don’t ask about my right knee.
Post-War Britain
Many “baby-boomers”, born into post-war Britain, didn’t expect to live to old age, even to reach 40. It was a bleak time, with men of all ages missing from every community, bomb-damage still visible in the cities and continuing food rationing…
- September 1953: Sugar rationing ended
- 4 July 1954: Meat and all other food rationing ended
There was the Cold War, Korean War, Vietnam War, not to mention the Berlin Wall, Israel, Cyprus, Indonesia… and waves of war refugees trying to settle safely in Europe.
But then, little seems to change when I look back. We still have worries about Russia, Korea, Middle-East… and waves of war refugees trying to settle safely in Europe.
My generation tried to change things. And we did. We got velcro, microwave ovens and the web (bless its little silicon socks).
And Today
The world IS a better place:-
- Global poverty and illiteracy (particularly female illiteracy) are declining
- Global average lifespans are increasing
- Global access to clean water is improving
- Disposable income in developed countries has vastly improved, despite recent wobbles
Overall – and I stress “overall” – improvements in the quality of human existence have accelerated over that period and continue to do so (despite everything politicians and bankers can do to reverse it).
Now THAT’s something to celebrate – as well as my birthday.
Happy Birthday, Andy! Glad to see you found your way back to the blog! 🙂
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Thanks, Beverley!
I’ve been over-committing with writing projects this year, but I hope to get back to weekly now. 😉
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Happy birthday, Andy! I hear you loud and clear. Excellent post; thoroughly enjoyed it!
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Many thanks. We try our best 😉
Keep up your rolling publishing successes!
It’s not easy to sparkle in the marathons that are novels and the sprints that are posts, when the novel is overdue and new story ideas thrust themselves at you from all directions.
But nothing worth doing is easy!
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Cool!
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Happy Birthday! I’ll blow up a balloon for you…or maybe not. I’ve gotten a bit breathless in my old age, though I’m not quite to where you are just yet:) Just keeping pace with the things that never seem to change tends to keep me panting! LOL
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Thanks for the birthday greetings!
I gave up on blowing up balloons a few years ago, when they started making them of tougher material that made them harder to inflate. 😉
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