The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

@thelighterside

Gen Xers and Boomers recall 18 unforgettable sounds and smells from the ’80s that disappeared
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Gen Xers and Boomers recall 18 unforgettable sounds and smells from the ’80s that disappeared

There are certain sounds and smells that exist across generations, at least so far. The pitter-patter of gentle rain. The musical notes of a bluebird. The scent of sea life in a vast ocean. The fragrant waft of a honeysuckle flower. But many sensory experiences fade with time. A guy on Threads was curious about the idea that certain sounds and smells might be specific to different generations. He asked, “What is a sound or smell that doesn’t exist anymore, but 40 years ago was so common it was considered background noise?” Generation Xers and Baby Boomers were ready to answer, offering nearly 4,000 replies. Sounds “Television static or the sound between radio stations.” Here’s a fun fact: In a recent article on WION, journalist Anamica Singh explains that TV and radio static contain remnants of the Big Bang: “The static hiss contained at least 1 percent of cosmic microwave background (CMB), a remnant of the birth of the universe 13.8 billion years ago. Not only on TV, but the same noise was also heard on radios. Everyone alive at the time these analogue televisions existed inadvertently time-traveled, in the sense that they witnessed the Big Bang, the universe’s past.” “The sound of coins falling into a payphone.” “The dial tone when the phone was left off the hook.” View this post on Instagram “The thump of plopping a phone book on the table, followed by the whispery sound of flipping its onion-skin paper pages, and finally the whir-click of dialing a rotary phone.” “Typewriter bells.” “The sound it made when you push a VHS tape into the VCR.” “The sound of the book-charging machine at the library that the librarian would insert the card into to date your books. Made the most satisfying cha-chunk sound.” “An analog radio with an extendable antenna sitting in the window ledge, playing a crackly country song by Hank Jr., and the hum of static on TV because somebody touched the dial.” Smells “The faint but pervasive smell of cigarettes everywhere all the time.” A no smoking sign in a restaurant. Photo credit: Canva Notably, cities began passing comprehensive laws regulating tobacco use in public spaces. In the mid-1970s, Minnesota enacted one of the first laws requiring restaurants to designate a “smoking area.” By the late 1980s, many other cities and states had followed suit. “The hot, dusty aroma of slide projectors and filmstrip machines projecting weird 1960s/70s educational films, floating through the classroom while you were passing notes under desks” “The smell of freshly printed dittos.” What these commenters are referring to are “ditto” copy machines, often used in schools and churches in the late 20th century. “The sound and smell of a disposable flash.” “Scratch ‘n’ sniff stickers!” “Drakkar Noir” This intense scent, a particularly popular men’s cologne in the ’80s, was mentioned a few times. Another commenter shared a very specific memory: “A Norman Rockwell calendar secured by a pearl-topped push-pin next to a ringing rotary phone, and the calendar smells like bacon grease and fried chicken.” The post Gen Xers and Boomers recall 18 unforgettable sounds and smells from the ’80s that disappeared appeared first on Upworthy.

Wife finds an incredibly clever way to find her husband buried in an avalanche
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Wife finds an incredibly clever way to find her husband buried in an avalanche

Michael Harris was on his final run on the ski slopes at Stevens Pass in the Cascade Mountains on February 26 when tragedy struck—he was caught in an avalanche. “Because I was on skis, I got caught between two slabs,” he told FOX 13 Seattle. Harris was buried in a snow hole and remained upright. He tried to free himself by making a swimming motion, but he couldn’t budge. “The sensation was being encased in cement,” he said. He was packed so tightly that he couldn’t even grab the phone from his jacket pocket. His wife, Penny, sensed something was wrong when she hadn’t heard from him. “I started freaking out,” she told WSAW-TV. “My texts got more intense, and then I started calling.” Harris could feel his phone buzzing in his pocket, but there was nothing he could do. “My mind shifted very quickly to ‘does anyone know that I’m here and how am I going to survive?’” he said. Stevens Pass. Photo credit: Michael Greenlee/Flickr Penny had a brilliant solution Penny checked the Find My feature on her phone to see whether her husband had moved on the mountain. But his location was static—not typical for a skier. Realizing that if he wasn’t moving, something was very wrong, she contacted the ski patrol and gave them his location. “They were able to take my location and get a snapshot of it and pinpoint pretty much where he was,” she said. After being stuck in the snow for four hours, Harris was rescued. Ski patrol was shocked to find him still conscious. Harris’ body temperature had dropped into the 70s, and he was severely hypothermic. Throughout the harrowing experience, all he could think about was his family. “The thing I was hoping is that I’d get to see her [his wife] and my four kids one more time,” he said. “They were the only thing I thought about.” Harris was alive, but he sustained several serious injuries in the avalanche. His daughter, Lauren, posted an update on GoFundMe about his condition. “A full trauma was called,” she wrote. “After various labs and imaging, my dad only sustained a contusion of his lung, pneumonia, injuries to his kidneys, and a right tibial plateau fracture.” Michael Harris in the hospital. Photo credit: GoFundMe The avalanche came at a terrible time for the family Harris is expected to make a full recovery, but his injuries couldn’t have come at a worse time. He is currently between jobs, and his recovery will delay any return to work. So, his family set up a GoFundMe page to help them through this difficult time. It has already raised over $36,000 toward a goal of $40,000. “I have started a GoFundMe to try and help alleviate some of the medical costs as well additional bills for my family as my dad is the sole provider, and we are unsure how long the road to recovery actually looks. Literally anything helps,” Lauren wrote.  When someone is caught in an avalanche and encased in freezing snow, time is of the essence. According to Safeback, about 75% of avalanche deaths occur due to suffocation, and after roughly ten minutes of being trapped in the snow, the risk of asphyxiation increases rapidly. Amazingly, Harris survived four hours in freezing conditions without passing out. What a blessing that his quick-thinking wife was able to locate him before he lost his life in the snow. The post Wife finds an incredibly clever way to find her husband buried in an avalanche appeared first on Upworthy.

John Krasinski Put a Hilarious Spin on 90s Throwback Trend—And Dwight Schrute Won’t Get it
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John Krasinski Put a Hilarious Spin on 90s Throwback Trend—And Dwight Schrute Won’t Get it

If you didn’t fall just a little bit in love with John Krasinski during his The Office days, were you even around in the early 2000s? Jim Halpert and Pam Beasley had the kind of love story that girls dream of. He wasn’t going to give up, and in the end, got the girl. Of course, there was a lot more to The Office than just the Pam and Jim storyline that kept viewers returning week after week. The show ran for nine seasons, full of jokes, smiles, and a few tears. In season 9, Jim and Pam decided to prank Dwight Schrute, the resident wet blanket, with “Asian Jim” played by Randall Park. If you haven’t seen it, it’s hilarious. The episode lent itself to John Krasinski owning the 1900s throwback trend on TikTok. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Did You Catch This? (@didyoucatchthistv) John Krasinski’s Tribute to the 1990s is Iconic The trend of using Goo Goo Doll’s “Iris” in the background shows a star today, and the text asks what they were like in the 1990s. John Krasinski jumped on the viral 1990s trend, but instead of showing his own photos from the days of flannels and windbreakers, he did something even more incredible. John Kraskinski shared photos of Randall Park. You know, Asian Jim. Fans of The Office went positively berserk. “The longest running joke I’ve ever seen,” someone wrote. “I woke up on the right side of my algorithm today lol,” another person shared. Fans crowned John Krasinski the undisputed champion of the 1990s throwback trend. “This bit is 15 years old and I still love it,” a fan wrote. “And this reel wins the Internet today. Game set match Scott….game over,” someone declared. This story’s featured image is by JC Olivera/2026GG/Penske Media via Getty Image.

Tech strategist shares why algorithms killed ‘taste’ and where to find it now
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Tech strategist shares why algorithms killed ‘taste’ and where to find it now

There has been a cultural shift over the past year or so: being at the forefront of social media and Internet culture—or being “chronically online”—is now frowned upon. It’s similar to the ’90s, when bragging about how much TV you watched could get you accused of lacking personality or having lowbrow taste. These days, bragging about bed-rotting and doomscrolling is akin to being a proud couch potato. Why are the chronically online backing away from their iPhones and calling TikTok trend followers tacky? It all comes down to the delivery system. In a viral Instagram post, Carmen Vicente, a social strategist in tech, says the shift began when the Internet changed from a place where savvy people pursued their interests on their own to one where culture was spoon-fed through algorithms. There’s a huge difference between sitting at the cultural trough and waiting to be fed by Meta and going out to discover what you authentically enjoy. The point is simple: You will never cultivate authentic taste in culture, art, movies, music, fashion, or food if your appetite is curated algorithmically. View this post on Instagram “Fifteen years ago, it required effort and curiosity to discover cool stuff on the Internet,” Vicente says. “But now, and since the advent of algorithms that hinge on economic metrics of success, looking away or elsewhere is the thing that requires effort and curiosity.” Vicente continues: “Personally speaking, I think taste is the result of your cultural inputs. And to develop good taste, we need to consume a diversity of inputs beyond just the confines of our modern suggestion engines. Simply put, the algorithms are controlled by the institutions. The institutions need to maximize shareholder value. And the more time you spend drinking the Kool-Aid from these fire hoses, the looser your grasp becomes on what is truly interesting, substantive, or moving.” A woman scrolling in bed. Photo credit: Canva There are myriad definitions of taste, but it’s generally seen as the ability to appreciate things that are culturally and aesthetically valuable. In his essay “Of the Standard of Taste,” philosopher David Hume argues that taste is a byproduct of a life rich in experience: “Strong sense, united to delicate sentiment, improved by practice, perfected by comparison, and cleared of all prejudice, can alone entitle critics to this valuable character.” Therefore, true taste can’t be developed without real-world experience and cultural inputs that go far beyond what’s delivered via smartphone. A woman at an exercise class. Photo credit: Canva The lesson here isn’t hard to figure out: it’s about a life lived shopping in brick-and-mortar stores, spending time outdoors, practicing hobbies that don’t involve screens, and reading books while in the dentist’s waiting room. There are so many incredible cultural treasures we can experience only by being in physical places with real people—where you can stumble upon life-changing culture by accident. Taste is a touchy subject, hard to separate from social status, because it often requires resources and connections to access many aspects of culture. However, that’s not an excuse to judge those who strive for an expansive, more refined sense of taste—or who hope others will join them on that journey—as merely performative. The post Tech strategist shares why algorithms killed ‘taste’ and where to find it now appeared first on Upworthy.

A dad who lost his young son to cancer shared a note on male grief that has gone massively viral
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A dad who lost his young son to cancer shared a note on male grief that has gone massively viral

Grief is an unfortunately universal and often inescapable feeling. Yet, due to certain societal norms, it can be harder for some people to embrace or fully work through than for others. In a Reddit post titled “100% Really Sucks,” a man wrote: “About ten years ago, our at the time 9-year-old son died of cancer. Hundreds of people asked my wife how she was doing, offered her support, etc. Lots of people asked me how she was doing, how the kids were doing, and how I had to be strong for her and our two remaining kids. Only a few close male friends asked how I was doing. Not one of my female friends did. Not even my mother. It never occurred to them. That really sucked. Not because I don’t think my wife deserved support. Of course she did – but so did I.” Reddit post. Photo credit: StreetKindly3614/Reddit The good news is that the OP bravely began a difficult discussion that seemed to resonate deeply with many people. The post received over 90,000 upvotes and 2.6 thousand comments. Clearly, people seem ready to talk about it. One Redditor noted that they shared a similar experience: “My wife and I divorced – after our marriage she chose drugs and alcohol and I chose to be a dad. People still ask me all the time how she’s doing through everything. She still gets invited to parent/kid meet ups even though the kids live with me 7 days a week. It’s unfair.” Another commenter added the importance of including men when an entire family needs support, writing, “It absolutely is unfair. I hope future generations will learn to be more supportive after seeing more great dads in action!” What was even more encouraging was that the Reddit community came together not only to commiserate but also to offer hopeful suggestions. Another commenter pointed out a similar situation, sharing, “We had a house fire. Lost everything. People in the community donated so many clothes and toiletries for my wife and kids. But nothing for me. One year later and I’m still struggling with wardrobe choices.” This Redditor was ready to help, writing, “What size do you wear bro? I have some nice clothes that I never wear I’d be happy to have dry cleaned and sent your way.” Not everyone, thankfully, had the same experience, though the post helped some feel a sense of gratitude: “My word, reading these comments just makes me appreciate my wife and my mom all the more. They actually support me when I let them know I am hurting or depressed. I do have to vocalize that I want the support in the moment because my wife will pick up on the fact that I’m down almost immediately and I’ll tell her I’m just having a down day. I don’t really deal with very bad depression but I do have days where it gets bad and she’s always there for me. When I was growing up, my mom never dismissed my feelings, never told me to ‘act like a man’. I’m so sorry to hear all of your stories of your struggles. I wish the best for all of you out there dealing with this type of stuff.” Society needs to encourage men to open up In the article “The Problem of Male Grief” for Psychology Today, Nick Norman, LICSW, discusses what he refers to as a “silent epidemic” among men. “According to the CDC, 1 in 10 men experiences anxiety or depression, but less than half reach out for help,” Norman wrote. “They are less likely to seek help for mental or emotional difficulties overall.” Norman seems to hit the nail right on the head when it comes to the Reddit post: “While there are common ways that men respond to grief, that does not mean that they are actually processing their emotions or coming to a healthy resolution. The real issue is not that men have some other means or manner of grieving. It is that the Western cultural expectation of men discourages grieving altogether.” He offered suggestions for men to create healthy spaces for one another: “The unspoken rules of oppressive masculinity often lead men to shame those who dare step outside of the limited emotional box we’re given. In this way, we become enemies of our brothers and create more pain when what we need is support. Although we may struggle with our own discomfort, we need to stop shaming other men for weeping and feeling authentically. We have enough challenges in this work. We owe it to one another to buoy each other up, or at least grant each other silent respect.” Mindfulness can help Jeanette Lorandini, LCSW, founder of Suffolk DBT in New York, spoke to Upworthy about the issue: “From a DBT [Dialectical Behavior Therapy] perspective, many boys grow up in environments where their emotions are invalidated. They are often taught very early that showing sadness or vulnerability is a sign of weakness and that they should ‘be strong.’ Over time, this can lead men to learn how to hide their emotions rather than understand or process them. They may become skilled at making their feelings invisible to others, but that does not mean those feelings are not there.” To counter this, Lorandini suggested men practice mindfulness to help process their emotions: “Mindfulness, a core component of DBT, encourages people to slow down, notice their emotional experience, and give themselves permission to feel sadness rather than push it away. We call that mindfulness of current emotion. When someone does not give themselves these important moments to grieve, they develop what we call inhibitive grief. It doesn’t go away but remains in a ‘holding cell.’ While it may not be a literal prison, it won’t go away until it is experienced. It often will show up in ways such as anger, substance use, working excessively, heavy screen time, or other maladaptive behaviors.” She added, “Grief does not require someone to fall apart, but it does require space to be felt. Learning to experience sadness in manageable moments, while continuing to move forward at a balanced pace, can help men process loss in a way that honors both their emotional needs and their role within their family.” The post A dad who lost his young son to cancer shared a note on male grief that has gone massively viral appeared first on Upworthy.