Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I keep rounding my age up to the next one - so I feel even older than I am. (39)

I have started using my specs as magnifying glasses for reading. (Before you suggest I go to the optician - I got new glasses in November).

I don't know what the hell people are talking about.

I have never heard of various people who seem to be in the paper/on the radio a lot.

When I get out of bed in the morning my hair looks a bit like Russell Brands - and I keep forgetting to comb it!!


Have I got any more signs to look out for?

Please don't say I am going to start rushing home to catch "The Archers" omnibus.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/2539-signs-you-are-getting-old/
Share on other sites

When policemen start looking younger. It's an old cliche, but it's true, most of them look like they're on work experience to me.


Mind you, I said that to my mum the other day and she sighed and said "never mind policemen, when you start to think bishops look young then you're in trouble!"

The laughter lines are more than just laughter lines.


There are more than just one or two grey hairs.


I can still 'do' all nighters but it takes a very long time to recover.


I've started reminiscing about the past.


The thought of the Redstar reopening doesn't fill me with excitement!


I'd rather drink quality rather than quantity (although preferably both)


I hate text speak even when texting.

When you meet serious people in responsible and proper jobs and discover they were born after you started work.


When, if you fall over, your first thought isn't "bugger, what a twat" it's "is my hip OK"


When offered directions to a great new pub, club, bar - you decide to go home as it's almost midnight.


When pensions seem a sensible topic of discussion


When, on all reasonable actuarial assumptions, you have less years before you than behind you.

Ladygooner Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> When you stop buying Cosmopolitan and start buying

> Good Housekeeping!



Actually, (sadly), one of my favourite bits in the Saturday Guardian magazine, is that bit where they tell you how to get coffee stains out of your tablecloths and stuff like that.


Other stuff I forgot to mention, is realising you are behaving like your mum or dad. (Scowling when people don't shut the door, that sort of thing).

Take your time and see if you can read each line aloud without a mistake.

The average person over 40 years of age cannot do it!


1. This is this cat.

2. This is is cat.

3. This is how cat.

4. This is to cat.

5. This is keep cat.

6. This is an cat.

7. This is old cat.

8. This is fart cat.

9. This is busy cat.

10. This is for cat.

11. This is forty cat.

12. This is seconds cat.


Now go back and read the third word in each line from the top down

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • So to enable people to experience 3 days of 'joy', our family has to endure two weeks of 7 days a week, 12 hours a day construction noise around 50m from our front window. That's HGVs driving up & down the road, constant reversing beeps from fork lifts & tractors, scaffolding poles crashing, pneumatic wrenches rattling, shouting etc etc. from 8am to 8pm. Every day. Even Sundays. Do you have all that near your house? Then there's the anti social behaviour during the festival, right outside our home - minicabs arriving, punters jumping out, chucking bottles and cans on the floor, having a quick p*ss against the wall, then off to the festival to have their 'joy'. Again & again, all afternoon & evening. For the whole bank holiday weekend. Guys having nitrous oxide parties in their cars, right outside our home at midnight, 1am.  Do you have all that near your house?  And then there's the strike afterwards, more construction noise for another week - 8am to 8pm, every day - then they disappear, leaving the park covered in fag butts, bottle tops, ring pulls, cable ties, cellophane filter tip tubes, disposable vapes, all usually trampled into the ground so that they are virtually impossible to remove. And then several months for the grass to almost recover enough for people to use again, except by then the summer is long gone.  Do you really think a "chill pill" is going to miraculously resolve all this? Please, have some empathy for people who are really impacted by this event. I've nothing against festivals, but they need to be located in a suitable space, and a small public park close to residential homes isn't it.
    • Does anyone have a paper shredder they no longer need? I gave mine away thinking I could use the soaking method, but then found it isn't suitable for large quantities of paper, for various reasons. The Library of Things is supposed to have one for hire, but it's been "coming soon" for weeks.
    • I was quite bemused as to why the leaves on my black bamboo were apparently dying and it  had weird things apparently growing on it. Then I came across this: https://inspectaslr.co.uk/black-bamboo-flowering-a-rare-worldwide-phenomenon-spotted-by-inspectas/ I was fond of my bamboo, which has grown in my garden for years, and the sparrows liked to perch and swing on it, too. Has anyone else locally had this happen? Presumably anybody with a black bamboo. Looking on the bright side,  I will be left with a lot of useful bean poles.
    • Don't tempt me. I like barking. I'm good at it. I score points if the dog I'm barking at looks round. I don't need a dog mask to do it though. But I might get thrown out of the pub 🤣
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...