
Erm, that's it really. Just wanted to share.
I'll be 39 in a couple of weeks, so I don't consider myself to be old yet, but I'm really enjoying the journey. I know a lot of women these days seem to see aging as the process of becoming a white-haired raisin and nothing more, but I see it as the gathering of wisdom which is something to be enjoyed. And Richard's aunties are in their late 60s and 70s, so I take the emphasis as being more on the 'Mother Earth' rather than the 'old' part anyway.JulieSherris wrote:I never thought I'd say this, but I like being old!!
I like being a bit batty & I like that I can still shock the kids![]()
Younger than me thenRosendula wrote:
I'll be 39 in a couple of weeks,
We had that kind of boiler in every house we lived in until the current one. I could never get through to my mother that I couldn't put the clothes to air in the airing cupboard because I didn't have an airing cupboard and I know the airing cupboard is where the immersion is but we didn't have an immersion and if there isn't an immersion, there isn't a cupboard for the immersion and I get my hot water from a boiler which is on the bedroom wall, not in a cupboard, and no the boiler doesn't heat the water in the immersion, it heats the water in the boiler, and no the boiler doesn't STORE the water in the immersion, it heats what I need, when I need it and sends it straight down the pipes to the taps not to the immersion becauseyvette wrote: We spent years trying to explain to my parents that our boiler only heats the water we need rather than using an immersion heater. We moved several times and after each move had the same kind of system. Eventually, my grandparents got a boiler like this and my dad rang me specially to explain to me how much better it was than an immersion heater and how we should get one....!