After 13 years online, Cubits.org is scheduled to be shut down. Please make sure you have the contact information for all your friends, and that you download whatever content you want from this site.
This is so amazing that interacting with people who inspire you about life. I like the workflow that includes so many activity teaching, advocating, etc.
The term vintage usually refers to items from the past that are not yet considered to be antique, but carry a certain nostalgic value, and are potentially of high quality. At first, it sounded odd to see it used in reference to people, but the more I think about it, the more I like and embrace the concept. I am too young to be antique. I am however, of a certain vintage, (circa 1952).
You have to be 100 to qualify as an antique, from around or before the middle ages to be an antiquity. However, I often feel like a relic of another era, when times were simpler.
wildflowers wrote:I like this quote and I like the word vintage used to describe a person. I suppose it's in line with the saying about aging like a fine wine.
Yes! Aging like a fine wine is a wonderful expression. I remember a wonderful gentleman in a care home back in the 70's who said that some of his fellow residents were like aged fine wine while others had turned to vinegar. LOL I hope that I never turn to vinegar.