Eighteen years ago was a terrible day, but if someone asked what the happiest day of your life was, what would you say?
Excluding the easy answer, like the day you got married or the day your children were born, do you have any idea when you were happiest?
I remember being very happy one Sunday in 1994 sitting on a tall hillside with someone watching boats go by on the river after being left home alone all weekend, and I think maybe, certainly to that point, I was happier then than I ever was.
In this world of sadness it's good to remember happiness.
The day I, after years of beubg abused, tormented and bullied by it, was physically attacked by my half brother for the last time. Until then it'd always beaten me because it was 5 years older.
That time it ended up on the floor crying "Get 'I'm off me! Get 'I'm off me!"
It never physically attacked me again.
Quote from: Svengoolie 3 on September 11, 2019, 10:20:22 AM
The day I, after years of beubg abused, tormented and bullied by it, was physically attacked by my half brother for the last time. Until then it'd always beaten me because it was 5 years older.
That time it ended up on the floor crying "Get 'I'm off me! Get 'I'm off me!"
It never physically attacked me again.
That's sad. I hope someday you'll have a happier experience to look back on.
Mine was probably a first date who unexpectedly stayed the night. The relationship was troubled but wow, that first night was magic.
Quote from: Svengoolie 3 on September 11, 2019, 10:20:22 AM
The day I, after years of beubg abused, tormented and bullied by it, was physically attacked by my half brother for the last time. Until then it'd always beaten me because it was 5 years older.
That time it ended up on the floor crying "Get 'I'm off me! Get 'I'm off me!"
It never physically attacked me again.
God my life is so much cooler than yours! :thumbup:
When I was hitchhiking threw Pennsylvania in the mountains in 1979 after I ran from home. No money.
I felt so free. :smile:
To be honest, I don't think I was ever really happy. Maybe some moments with bursts of happiness but nothing permanent? Let's see...
When Blind Guardian came to my city it was a pretty epic night. Bands rarely come to my city since it's not the capital.
That time I went to see Rhapsody of Fire and had a chat with Luca Turilli, even got a couple of pictures with him. What a cool guy he is.
The David Gilmour concert in 2016, awesome. I went with my parents and brothers, it was crazy.
The night I went to see the Warcraft movie really changed my perspective of life.
That's pretty much it. :drink:
Perhaps when my Toronto Blue Jays won the World Series back-to-back in '92-'93. I remember exactly where I was both times. At my sister's house (with her cats driving my allergies nuts) and then at my folks' house with my brother after karate practice. We both love the Blue Jays so we were pretty damn happy.
Also, maybe when I got my first (and present) house 8 years ago. Apartment living was bad for my allergies.
I been really happy most of the time lately.
I got my kids and Tiana and we own our home (really small-built in 1940).
But it's ours.
My kids are grown up. I still see them almost every other day. They got families too. I retired at the age of 54 because of multiple heart surgries. I thought I was gonna die. I was was ready for it. But I'm still here. 3 years later I'm still alive.
Yeah- I can't complain one bit.
Quote from: retrorussell on September 11, 2019, 01:44:05 PM
Perhaps when my Toronto Blue Jays won the World Series back-to-back in '92-'93. I remember exactly where I was both times. At my sister's house (with her cats driving my allergies nuts) and then at my folks' house with my brother after karate practice. We both love the Blue Jays so we were pretty damn happy.
Also, maybe when I got my first (and present) house 8 years ago. Apartment living was bad for my allergies.
I can understand not living in an apartment. I rented many houses and trailers too, in my life.
I owned a couple (as in 2) before the place I have now.
Apartment living is the worst. The neighbors screaming at each other with baby's crying! Folks playing loud music, so you have to jam on the most crazy Black Flag album you own just to blow him away. Actually- I kinda liked it in the 80's and 90's, because these cheap ply board and dry wall pieces of s**t in back of town the size of Mayberry were filled with
good folks. It was the Lawton Ghetto! PWT* and Mexicans. ( I was in the PWT catagory) We all got along. It was just that stupid people would be around and do stupid s**t. And I would respond in stupid ways. And get arrested.I hated getting arrested. But it never scared me. I thought- " This should be interesting!" I can't say I was ever scared when I was on my own, by myself.
*Poor White Trash
Two come to mind . . . one was my birthday, back in 2005.
I took the day off work at lunchtime, went arrowhead hunting and found 14 whole points, including two Paleo pieces, then came home, got my bath, went out to eat at my favorite restaurant, and then came home and spent the evening with my wife.
The other was my first full day in Israel, back in March 2016. Walking by the Sea of Galilee, touring my first Roman ruin, eating lunch by a babbling brook on the slopes of Mount Hermon, and then prowling multiple ancient sites that afternoon - followed by walking through the shops and bazaars in the city of Tiberias. WONDERFUL day!
October 31st, 1970, Saturday. I had my new store-bought Frankenstein costume. I had a cool Trick or Treat bag with a paper cord handle and ran around and ran around our dining room table. My mother was amused by my glee and laughed at me. I'm pretty sure the movie FRANKENSTEIN was the feature that noon on Creature Features. I later slipped out and ran blocks and blocks away from our house into neighborhoods I didn't know trick or treating alone in the bright afternoon. Our trick or treat rule had always been proclaimed by our mother: "Not until dark!" Hard to imagine kids today having the kind of freedom I had. Happy day.
^ I can dig the freedom of Halloween back in the day. We just wandered everywhere. No parents in sight.
Quote from: Allhallowsday on September 11, 2019, 08:26:43 PM
October 31st, 1970, Saturday. I had my new store-bought Frankenstein costume. I had a cool Trick or Treat bag with a paper cord handle and ran around and ran around our dining room table. My mother was amused by my glee and laughed at me. I'm pretty sure the movie FRANKENSTEIN was the feature that noon on Creature Features. I later slipped out and ran blocks and blocks away from our house into neighborhoods I didn't know trick or treating alone in the bright afternoon. Our trick or treat rule had always been proclaimed by our mother: "Not until dark!" Hard to imagine kids today having the kind of freedom I had. Happy day.
:thumbup: :thumbup: :thumbup:
I was thinking of another good day, a specific day that was very happy but entirely different from the nice memory of being on the hilltop I wrote about earlier. The hilltop was gentle and nice, this other one was crazy-scary and much of the overwhelming happiness I felt came from the fact it was over.
Did you ever do anything dangerous, as in truly life-threateningly hazardous, not sure you're going to come through it, but you do, and when it's truly behind you the feeling is intoxicating euphoria?
I was remembering one particular time that fits that description, and the sensation after was so amazing I actually understood the addiction daredevils an soldiers and tightrope-walking risk takers get when they reach that moment, and how it would draw them to terrifying deeds just so they could experience it.
In my case that day I couldn't top smiling and giggling all goofy and silly I felt so happy to go from the fear and adrenaline into the glow of relief that it was done, I was safe again.
It did make for a happy day.
Quote from: ER on September 11, 2019, 09:51:54 PM
...
Did you ever do anything dangerous, as in truly life-threateningly hazardous, not sure you're going to come through it, but you do, and when it's truly behind you the feeling is intoxicating euphoria?
...
It did make for a happy day.
Yes, I remember climbing onto the roof of the
Alexander Lodge in Spring Lake, NJ out of the third floor window and up the shingled eave at an 85 degree angle, above the concrete driveway / port, so I could walk at the "widow's walk" (really a wrought iron painted ornament) on top of the building. My older sister led the way, bold as she was. My other brother and baby sister declined if I remember right. I wasn't scared of nothing!
To quote
ER :
"It did make for a happy day."
Quote from: Allhallowsday on September 11, 2019, 10:16:45 PM
Quote from: ER on September 11, 2019, 09:51:54 PM
...
Did you ever do anything dangerous, as in truly life-threateningly hazardous, not sure you're going to come through it, but you do, and when it's truly behind you the feeling is intoxicating euphoria?
...
It did make for a happy day.
Yes, I remember climbing onto the roof of the Alexander Lodge in Spring Lake, NJ out of the third floor window and up the shingled eave at an 85 degree angle, above the concrete driveway / port, so I could walk at the "widow's walk" (really a wrought iron painted ornament) on top of the building. My older sister led the way, bold as she was. My other brother and baby sister declined if I remember right. I wasn't scared of nothing!
To quote ER : "It did make for a happy day."
Heck, yeah! Quite the feeling, innit?
With all the nonsense I've been through in my life - abandonment, abuse (physical, verbal, etc) living through a civil war etc - I can say that I have never, in my 52 years of life, had a totally happy day. Happy moments, happy hours etc yes but a happy day in total? Never.
Some people might think that I'm a pretty miserable SOB but I'm not. Young peeps think I'm a cool old guy, kids like me and most people respond positively to me so, that's me. :smile:
Quote from: Trevor on September 12, 2019, 05:54:45 AM
With all the nonsense I've been through in my life - abandonment, abuse (physical, verbal, etc) living through a civil war etc - I can say that I have never, in my 52 years of life, had a totally happy day. Happy moments, happy hours etc yes but a happy day in total? Never.
Some people might think that I'm a pretty miserable SOB but I'm not. Young peeps think I'm a cool old guy, kids like me and most people respond positively to me so, that's me. :smile:
Then you're definitely due a happy day. :smile:
I have had many happy days and I feel like picking just one out would be doing the others a disservice. However, while definitely not the happiest day, I have to say that the last day of school before summer vacation was always so great. There was just such an amazing feeling about knowing I have all summer to stay up late and do a whole lot of whatever I wanted, watch late-night tv and movies, shower whenever I wanted (or rather didn't want to - I was kind of a gross teenager), have sleepovers in the middle of the week... now I have to wait for retirement to do that again. Or until I hit the lottery. I have high hopes.
Quote from: Paquita on September 12, 2019, 10:57:59 PM
I have had many happy days and I feel like picking just one out would be doing the others a disservice. However, while definitely not the happiest day, I have to say that the last day of school before summer vacation was always so great. There was just such an amazing feeling about knowing I have all summer to stay up late and do a whole lot of whatever I wanted, watch late-night tv and movies, shower whenever I wanted (or rather didn't want to - I was kind of a gross teenager), have sleepovers in the middle of the week... now I have to wait for retirement to do that again. Or until I hit the lottery. I have high hopes.
Perfect answer! School ending was always bliss.
Did I ever do anything dangerous?
Never. :drink:
So many different types of happiness. The day I got married and the birth of Ash is obviously a couple of highlights. Anytime I go to see a good band live I get super hyper and high. Concerts like that are about the only time I feel any connection to the rest of the human race and I even almost feel part of the crowd. The year and a half I worked with two guys called Baldy and Scott were the favourite time of my working life. I doubt I'll ever enjoy working quite as much again as I did for those days. The night a girl called Tanya seduced me...
I have a lot of good memories and while I have plenty of bad ones too I know what wolf I'd rather feed.
Quote from: Alex on September 13, 2019, 01:48:48 AM
I have a lot of good memories and while I have plenty of bad ones too I know what wolf I'd rather feed.
I like that. Is it a Scottish saying?
Quote from: ER on September 13, 2019, 11:50:06 AM
Quote from: Alex on September 13, 2019, 01:48:48 AM
I have a lot of good memories and while I have plenty of bad ones too I know what wolf I'd rather feed.
I like that. Is it a Scottish saying?
http://youtu.be/vzKryaN44ss (http://youtu.be/vzKryaN44ss)
The Rev got it right there.
Quote from: Rev. Powell on September 13, 2019, 12:35:23 PM
Quote from: ER on September 13, 2019, 11:50:06 AM
Quote from: Alex on September 13, 2019, 01:48:48 AM
I have a lot of good memories and while I have plenty of bad ones too I know what wolf I'd rather feed.
I like that. Is it a Scottish saying?
http://youtu.be/vzKryaN44ss (http://youtu.be/vzKryaN44ss)
:thumbup: