Tendancy towards anachronism

I personally don’t see snuff taking as an anachronism. I don’t think it was as popular as we all would like to think. I believe its day has yet to come.

A good wish for sure BUT it was as popular as we like to think. :wink: Snuff was f***ing HUGE back in the days.

An apt observation. I have some of these preferences myself. Among them: Black 1940’s wing tips Vintage safety razor with brush & mug ‘Soda jerk’ glasses Pipes (corn cob, burl, and deer antler so far - looking to add a clay churchwarden) Gardening and preserving Soviet era eastern European firearms Fountain pens My grandfather’s hats & ties Vinyl records, and some lacquer 78’s

I do like to go simple, timeless with certain things at times or in some areas. I like to go reuseable(sp?) over disposable, also prefer foods with more natural ingredients. I use paper where lots of folk would use computers and such. Double edge razors, or at times a straight. I prefer cooking w/gas, wood, charcoal etc. over electric units. Stuff like that. Simple if not anachronistic… For the record, as I’ve heard. Pagan means “the people who dwell in the countryside”, those who didn’t want to live in the kingdom under the rule of the king. So a pagan may or may not have a religion. I think I heard this in R. Buckland’s or G. Gardner’s work…

Badger brush and shaving mug. Cast iron pans and dutch oven. Pocket watches rather than wrist watches (mechanical of course!) Old Time Radio (mostly hardboiled detectives and Fibber McGee & Molly.) Musical preference - Doo Wop. Monastic aspirant. Sad to say… the handlebar moustache that I sported for several years has been replaced by a goatee (of sorts) after I was told that the handlebars would probably have to go if I become a monk.

@howdydave That’s a cryin’ shame. I miss my handlebars :((

Pagans, myself included, use the term to mean pre- or non-christian (generally non-mainstream) religious practices, like shamanism, wicca, druidism &c. I’m amused to find that Americans generally prefer “pagan” and tend to find “heathen” derogatory, while in Europe, or at least the UK, the opposite is generally true. Most of our words derived from ancient words are at best tangentially related to their original meanings, like dexterity and sinister. @basement_Shaman, are you affiliated with the Basement Shaman business?

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@Asherael- No, I am a self employed Craftsman, General contractor in the building trades industry. I study the use of herbs for medical and spiritual enlightenment and optimal health. I don’t believe in organized religion but trust they do hold value to society. That they give hope for people to believe there is something after death. And the fear of eternal damnation keeps masses from suicide,homicide and genicide. I believe in the spirit world and there is a power struggel of positive and negitive forces in the universe. Being human is a temporary condition but the spirit is immortal .We reside in a three dimentional world where we measure time as linear that is one dimension. And that is ok for most humans that use 10 to 15 % of their brains. The shaman expansion into the spiritual world brings about change and answers to benefit those whom are in contact with help from a hyperdimentional nonlinear realm resulting in a paradigm shift. These are only words on the screen, though they effect everyone who reads them, so does every action you take throughout your existance. I put this into my work that will be around long after I expire.

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Ashrael- yeah, the meanings and uses of various terms is interesting. In my (personal, and subjective) experience, the Wiccans-witches-etc, that I’ve known seemed to rarely use the term pagan, maybe those you know use it more. Also I found it interesting that the term “occult” simply means “hidden”, which makes a lot of sense to me when I think about it. Also “sinister” I believe means left or left handed, and “The left hand path” is a common term to occultists. All interesting to me! basement_shaman- do you think immortality can be found in transcending linear time to the eternal present? I love thinking about this stuff! *eh, maybe that was just one of “those questions” pardon me…

Snuff-Check; Straight razor, mug and brush-Check; Cast iron skillet and dutch oven-Check; cooking from scratch. besides snuff my other passion is the practice of medieval and renaissance swordmanship (mostly longsword and sword & buckler) not of the same period but I love them both!

Man @tboyer that explains me pretty well. Actually, exactly.

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I am also a WWII British Reenactor. Kindof a center of all of my anachronistic tendencies. Snuff, Straight Razor shaving, Pipe Smoking, old firearms, and everything Old English.

I am also a WWII British Reenactor. Kindof a center of all of my anachronistic tendencies. Snuff, Straight Razor shaving, Pipe Smoking, old firearms, and everything Old English.

Interesting that you are a WW2 re-enactor. By 1939 all the things you mention (old firearms is of course subjective) had become or were becoming old hat! I also find it interesting how WW2 has become historic in my lifetime. I was born in 1971 and as a 70s kid read comics and saw films about the war constantly. It only ended 35 years or so previously so didn’t seem ‘old’, just a bit dated. Even the Great War was not so distant - as a boy, I knew one or two elderly men who had fought in it. Yet now, looking back, the 1940s seems like ancient history.

It is strange to think that WWI is now out of living memory completely. It is especially strange to think that when looking at footage of the war. @Austinallegro

Snuff. Merkur safety razor with mug and brush, straight razor occasionally but not lately. I want to get a better straight before I pick it up again. I do like the Safety razor a lot though so I might stick with it. I like to read an actual newspaper when I can. I wear suspenders (not the super skinny hipster ones but the dickies/perry work suspenders). Always use my zippo or other such lighters or muches. And I Love baseball and The Reds. America’s past time.

I assume you mean that combat in WW1 is out of living memory. Some people, centenarians, will still be alive who remember it as children - I know of one such person myself.

Yeah, I still know WWII Vets.

Depending where one lives, I would say nasal snuff is a characteristic, or at least a gateway into other forms of anachronism. It is by no way common in the “blue” northeast so those who do partake, seem to overlap with other past customs and lost arts as well, well, from my experience at least. Personally, I am a mixed lot of time periods. Snuff, fountain pen, mechanical watch, gentleman’s pocketknife, and a wide-brimmed felt hat combine with an always connected cell phone, digital SLR, and ebook reader. It is an interesting balance where I use the modern to experience the past. For example, what is my ebook reader filled with? The classics, or non-fiction history. The ability to locate and immediately read a book using these methods is quite extraordinary. However, if it is a text that I know I will re-read or holds value to me, I’ll then only accept it in a physical form. The same with music, I have an iPod, but it’s filled with classical. My truck has manual windows and manual locks. I prefer a revolver over a semi-auto and .38 over 9mm. A man always opens the door for a lady and a man always pays. Whiskey neat, though occasionally over ice depending on the brand.

Seek and ye shall find. As it takes some effort esp. in thr States to locate and now purchase snuff, I would say that the modern snuffer is indicative of a broader, more anachronistic nature.

I think it has more to do with epicurean spirit the willingness to look for the most awesome ways to do things. You have to have the kind of spirit that doesn’t just enjoy the raw aspects of things but the refined aspects as well. Or at least that’s what I deduce

Some things are simply timeless.

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I use a lot of pencils and fountain pens. I have made my own quills. I like to grow my hair long (unlike what my corporate beings would like to do or see). I hardly use my smartphone these days. I collect coins. I use a full blade metal razor (and not Gillette) and a shaving soap. I use alum as aftershave. I love to preserve papers and books (blank ones, on which I can write). I journal by hand written notes. I have a kindle but don’t use it - prefer hard copies. I use tealights in my room at night before sleeping with an oil diffuser. I grow my thumbnails. I don’t like noisy pubs and bars and prefer a drink with close friends at home.

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