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MDBCs 02 Mar 2023


March 2nd 2023 - Holidays and Observances

 

(click on the day for details)

 

Observances (click on the day, BD or week for details)

American Citizenship Day

International Rescue Cat Day

James Ronald Webster Day

National Banana Cream Pie Day

National Egg McMuffin Day

National Hospitalist Day

National Walter Day

The Toddle Waddle

World Teen Mental Wellness Day

World Book Day

Dr. Seuss Day

 

Luke Combs’s Birthday

Savannah LaBrant’s Birthday

Jon Bon Jovi’s Birthday

Janhvi Kapoor’s Birthday

Cindy Mello’s Birthday

Becky G’s Birthday

Dr. Seuss’s Birthday

 

Fun Observances

 Old Stuff Day

March 2 is Old Stuff Day. Take some time on this made-up holiday to appreciate the beauty of all things old and vintage.

An old workbench in a basement.

Or you can reflect on the same old, and sometimes boring, things that you do every day and take the opportunity to change things up.

The holiday is also sometimes called National Old Stuff Day in the United States.

Increased Value

While people often see old things as something to be replaced by newer, shinier things, not all of them are useless. Wines, for example, are more valuable and tastier as they grow older.

Many old items like maps, books, jewelry, furniture, clothes, and artifacts also gain value as they age. This is because they represent workmanship and aesthetics of a previous historical era, as well as technology that may not exist in present times.

Much more valuable than old inanimate items is the wisdom and knowledge we can get from old people. From old family members, one can learn their family history, their genealogy, and their origins. Old people can provide us a richer and more colorful account of the past than any history book can.

Antique Versus Vintage

Not all old things are created equal. Those who study history divide historical items into two groups based on their age. Antiques are items that are at least 100 years old, while vintage items usually have to be at least 30 years or more old.

How to Celebrate?

  • Sort out that crammed attic or basement, and throw away any old things you have no use for anymore.
  • Or, start a vintage collection. Visit thrift stores and flea markets - who knows what treasures you may come across?
  • Get together with your grandparents or someone older than you and ask them to tell you stories about their childhood and youth. Learn about what was going on in the world when they were growing up.
  • Take a bit of time today to contemplate your life and to add a few new activities or hobbies to spice up your routine. Continuing on the theme of old things, perhaps you could pick up collecting old rocks?

Did You Know…

…that earliest known pieces of jewelry made by humans are thought to be about 100,000 years old? Found in a cave in Israel, the pieces were made from mollusk shells.

 

 

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I called a video shop to order the war movie Battle of the Bulge.

"Hold on," said the clerk. "I'll check our aerobics tapes."

 

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I was hospitalized with an awful sinus infection that caused the entire left side of my face to swell. On the third day, the nurse led me to believe that I was finally recovering when she announced excitedly,

"Look, your wrinkles are coming back!"

 

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My wife received a credit-card application in the mail that she had not requested. She didn't want it, but I did. So I crossed off my wife's name on the form, entered my own and returned the application. I soon got a phone call from a woman saying my application had been rejected.

I asked her why, and she told me the card could only be issued to the person originally solicited by the offer. However, she invited me to reapply, which I did during the same telephone call.

A few days later I got another call to tell me my second application had been rejected.

Why? The woman told me their files showed that I had previously applied for a card and had been denied.

 

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At his 103rd birthday party, my grandfather was asked if he thought that he'd be around for his 104th.

"I certainly do," he replied. "Statistics show that very few people die between the ages of 103 and 104."

 

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As my sister and I were counting the cows in a pasture, Dad glanced over at the herd and said, “There are 127.”

“How’d you know?” we asked.

He replied, “I counted their legs and divided by four.”

Decades later, my kids give me the same look I gave my dad every time I pull that same gag.

 

 

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sandrewn :cowboy:

  • Haha 6

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