Of permanence and change

24 thoughts on “Of permanence and change”

    1. Seventy-four makes me “old” going on “ancient.” I think that’s what bothers me … that I’m older than concrete-and-steel structures that are being torn down … ugh.

  1. How true is all of this. How alarming that nowadays nothing is supposed to last. I would say that my permanent and reassuring present in my life is God, but in my heart I think (and I hope) that also my family would be forever (or as long as life could be).

    1. I’m used to little things, appliances, clothes, etc. being considered disposable and not worth repairing anymore. But entire buildings? Just tear them down and build new ones? Why?

  2. My question is why? Was it falling apart? Too far gone to repair? Or did the current powers that be simply think it had no further use? I don’t know who made the decision, but I do know that governing bodies sometimes do nutty things for no reason.

    1. Apparently a newer stadium has been built nearby. In its place will be a new hotel, parking, and green space. Which still doesn’t explain why it needed replacing. No doubt the thinking involves what would be most profitable.

    2. Did some more reading. Wikipedia says the building’s cloth roof had been torn several times during storms and partially collapsed once. Ongoing repairs made it too expensive to maintain. Reinforces my concern about Denver International Airport, which opened in 1995. It also has a cloth fiberglass roof.

  3. I would think that years of studying science, astronomy and geology would’ve eliminated any worries on my part about the impermanence of anything built by humans or even we humans ourselves but, sadly, it has not. Maybe I’m just getting old too…

    1. Granted, nothing built by humans is permanent. It just feels weird to be outliving major human constuctions that are/were younger than I am. On the other hand, it’s somehow reassuring to have grown up in a solid house built way before I was born. It’s still standing, lived in by a family that appreciates it and its protected status in a designated historical district. I dunno. As I said, the whole thing brings out a lot of mixed feelings.

    1. Thinking of the pyramids, Stonehenge, Machu Pichu, the Roman coliseum, the Parthenon … we just don’t build ’em the way we used to, do we? Even so, we humans occupy only the last two seconds in the geologic history of the world. We are but gnats.

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