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Village Squire, 1977-01, Page 34r P. S. Where have the years gone? BY KEITH ROULSTON It's k startling discovery to realize you're getting old. We seem to go along for years not worrying about our age then suddenly something brings it to our attention and we start reflecting how fast the years are flying. The other .day I saw an article, the kind of article the newspapers print at the end of every year, that talked about the latest pop music star, some guy from England. I'd never even heard of him before. I was suddenly, I realized, in the same position as my parents were a dozen or so years ago when I and my friends had been listening to the big stars of the time and couldn't understand that parents could be so stupid as not to know who we were talking about. I would now be in the same class if I talked to the young music lovers of today. It's a traumatic time for people of my generation. Ours was the generation that coined the phrase "Never trust anyone over 30". Later this month, I'll pass that milestone myself. It's strange, isn't it, that you don't think you are changing until you reach a certain point in life and look back and realize just how far you have come. I mean take a look back at the things that once mattered most in your life. The rock music star I'd never heard of for instance. Fifteen years ago I couldn't have imagined not knowing the name, age and birthplace of every popular singer. Somewhere along the way, slowly but surely other things became more important. The ever changing field of rock music once such an important part , of nearly all teenagers first lost its importance, then became a squealing, earnumbing foreign territory that few of us want to have any part of. Even the records we once bought and played with reverence, now sound raucous. Today, when we do listen to music, it is to a sweeter sound. The new stars of the younger crowd come and go and we never even know they came, let alone that they went. From the time I was about ten, every kid I knew could tell you the make and model of any car on the road. The interest in cars grew throughout the teenage years and though I was never a car expert, I picked up enough of the jargon of engine capacities, engine and body modifications and the other paraphernalia of the teenage car culture that was necessary just to carry on an intelligent conversation with most of the other young men of the period. 32, Village Squire/January 1977 Today, I could hardly tell you what kind of car most of the vehicles on the road are, let alone the year or model. A car today isn't a status symbol as it was in the teenage years. It's simply a necessity, a very expensive necessity. On the other hand, things become important that once went unnoticed. Once, for instance, a cold frosty morning was something that was admired for its beauty. Today, the admiration is tempered with a thought of what that cold weather will do to the fuel bill which seems to get higher every month. Time, back in those days, meant less than today. Long hours could be spent in contemplating a summer sunset or the wind in the trees. Today, regretfully, there are too many other tasks to be done to "waste" time in such things. The loss is mine. The teenage years were troublesome ones, a time of worry about where you were going, what the future held. Today we are too wrapped up in the future to worry for the future in many ways is here. What we do today will effect what happens tomorrow and so on down the line. Now that we have chosen the path we're going to take for our lives, it's full steam ahead with only a chance now and then to stop, think and adjust our course slightly. The • future? The future will look after itself. The problem is to look after today. Children are born, they are rushed to grow, they grow fast and suddenly it is too fast. Suddenly we wish they would slow down as they rush toward adulthood and take with them precious years of our lives: years we were in such a hurry to get through that we didn't take time to properly enjoy. Years when we were so busy with job and homebuilding and gathering of material things that we didn't gather enough of the wealth of special loving memories. We all have these moments, now and then when we look back and wonder where the time has gone. But now the thoughts go on to today and tommorrow and yesterday is left behind. Yesterday is left behind until some other moment in the future when today's future will be a yesterday and once again we'll look back and wonder where the years fled and survey what we've accomplished in that time. And so it goes at 30 and at 40 and 50 and 60 and hopefully 70. We are in the age when we look back, and think. STANFORD JEWELLERS Fred and John Stanford, Prop. 187 Main St. W., Listowel 291-4561 Store -Wide SALE 20 % TO 50% OFF All merchandise Aft Jiiofi Sebringrille Opp. Post Offict LOVELY THINGS FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD.