Why Certain Images from Yesteryear Maintain the Strength of the Glory Days

by Barrett

My vacation photography from the North Fork of Long Island reflects the happiness from a different time and pace.

I sometimes pine for the mid-twentieth century when life was supposed to be ‘better.’ Idolized by movies, photography and old advertising campaigns, this period represented a slower, more wholesome and happier era.

I don’t know if this myth from before my time is true. Perhaps it was just a dream. But the idea of it is still alive and well.

The Good Old Days
My father always used to wax poetic about the world of his younger days. He never complained about life with the relatively limited technology of that time. No computers. No internet. No cell phones. (I know these are debatable advantages.)

But fundamentally, I think life was more difficult back then. Lots of folks worked long hours to make ends meet and had any number of life-challenging issues to contend with.

Even the nostalgic world from the Disney+ series “Wandavision,” which displayed manufactured happiness from past decades couldn’t prevent existential cracks from forming after only a couple episodes.

Really, how good were the good old days?

Yesteryear is Gone
Still, collective memories from the past can represent a paradise lost. The grass was somehow greener.

That said, today still contains plenty of the elements we allegedly yearn for. You’ve just got to look about and find them in what is arguably a more complicated, contemporary life.

So, perhaps this is really about less complexity and more simplicity.

Which is why vacations are often designed to slow down and temporarily pull us to places that embody simplicity or visually reflect past images of it.

Time Traveling on Vacation
My family and I have enjoyed vacationing on the sleepy and sandy North Fork of Long Island, and we recently returned to Peconic and Greenport after some years away.

This year, my camera was drawn to imagery that reflects this simplified happiness of a certain past. Small but thriving downtowns. Diners. Farm stands. Fishing by the shore.

The good news is this is not only a reflection. We didn’t really have to time travel to reach it. Pieces are still very much in our everyday reality.

Bathing yourself in this nurturing imagery will not only revitalize the soul and reground you in your present. It will simultaneously reinforce the strength of our collective memory of the glory days.

Here’s a bit of what I spotted through my happy journey down a cultural memory lane, alive and well in today’s present.











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