andekwarhola wrote: » I thought only people in the late 40s to mid 50s used the word 'Rave' these before being shushed by their mortified children.
Alrigghtythen wrote: » So I'm not a square what word do the kids dig these days for a shindig?
pgj2015 wrote: » dont know, I dont really care what the kids say.
Slim Charles wrote: » Because it was a decent thing to do when young and full of life, im in my thirties now and dont want to jeopardise my job by missing two days trying to recover from drinking till all hours with people I dont like. Give me a night in on the cans with our lass any day.
andekwarhola wrote: » Get your kids to show you youtube embedding skillz, grandad.
pgj2015 wrote: » https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=er2lzvlfPCE 5:58 calm down.
andekwarhola wrote: » Too late, I'm telling your Big Techno DJ Mates.
bop1977 wrote: » Can’t handle the hangovers.
The Mighty Quinn wrote: » This is probably a big part. I too am mid 30s. I enjoyed a drink in my 20s, often to excess, but not at the bad end of things. I earned less money yet had far more disposable cash. I should have used it wiser... However I had many a night out, many a hangover. I also occasionally dabbled with ecstasy. It was great fun until it wasn't. The last time I took them, some 7 years ago, the come down was so severe it put me off for life. Drink is similar on a lesser scale. I can't cope with the hangovers. I also couldn't afford it, would end up being an absentee employee or father or both. Being "dry" is living life fuller as far as I'm concerned.
Feisar wrote: » Thirty-six, still enjoy a good session, priorities shift though, our baby is almost a year old so there are more important things in life than waking up wondering where I am and who the hell is that. Plus my wife wouldn't be impressed! I woke up one time beside a friend on a large couch, she asked me, "did we have sex?" I reached down, gave the wee lad a rub, had a sniff and said, "no." They say leopards don't change their spots but that lad is gone, hopefully.When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
pgj2015 wrote: » I hope you dont regret in when you are older.
Feisar wrote: » Thirty-six, still enjoy a good session, priorities shift though, our baby is almost a year old so there are more important things in life than waking up wondering where I am and who the hell is that. Plus my wife wouldn't be impressed! [/I]
L1011 wrote: » I used to go to club nights all across the country (mostly NI, cause Dublin crowds had a high scumbag %, and the regional cities rarely got the acts that even regional towns in NI got then), England, Amsterdam. Usually two or three festivals a year. Random pile of non-dance gigs, some in the UK. Then I got a mortgage. At 24. Barely went on holiday for three years afterwards, no nights out further than my local. Got one holiday to Copenhagen when there were four airlines / five flights a day fighting it out for maybe one flight of passengers in winter and the return for two was €50 with a checked bag. By the time I'd recovered enough discretionary spend I couldn't hack the hangovers, the club nights running to 6am, flying in at 10pm and out at 9pm, etc etc. Had booked a four day festival this summer - but a 4* hotel walking distance from the site rather than the camping or holiday cottages - and was fully expecting to maybe lose day 3 to staring at the ceiling in the hotel.
andekwarhola wrote: » I'm not the one crying on a forum on a Friday night about my mates swerving me, dude.
Deleted User wrote: » Is it not kind of tragic to be partying like you're 18 when you're in your 40s?