Sunday, March 28, 2010

Ninety Years

Suzanne Newton is 90 years old! I wanted to experience 90. I wanted to feel what 90 feels like. I wanted to make 90 somethings. I thought about some sort of origami project but realized I would have had to begin this idea months ago. And I only had two days to create. And so the beads. I hand rolled 90 paper beads and attached them to a birthday crown to give to Suzanne.

Halfway through this project I suddenly realized how very young I am. It seems like 39 bead years should be a lot. And really it is. But I made 39 beads, and I still had 51 more to make to get to 90! And every bead is a year lived. WOW!

90 years. How much life: love, loss, stories, adventures, relationships, travel, style, inventions, how many years! And from what I have heard, Suzanne has always lived life. Just think of the changes that she has experienced in her lifetime...

Ninety years ago:

• The FIRST World War has just ended.
• Women are just given the right to vote with the passage of the 19th amendment to the constitution.
• The 18th amendment to the constitution prohibits the production, sales or transportation of alcoholic beverages: Prohibition.
• The "Jazz Age" begins.
• The average earnings for a family in the US is $1236.
• It takes 13 days to reach California from New York. There are 387,000 miles of paved road.
• The life expectancy for a male is 53.6 and for a female, 54.6.
• Henry Ford's combustion engine and assembly line production of the automobile begins to allow affordability to the middle class.
• United Artists Corporation is formed by Charles Chaplin, Mary Pickford, Douglas Fairbanks and D.W. Griffith.
• The flu and pneumonia spread worldwide killing thousands.
• The New York Yankees buy Babe Ruth.
• The first commercial radio station in the U.S. begins in Detroit, Michigan and the first radios appear for sale.
• Traffic lights, the Band-Aid and the hair dryer are invented.

1 comment:

Newton said...

Christa - I am delighted to hear what you are thinking and that you have connected me up with the world as it was from my birth. Thank you so much for putting this in writing.

I send my love, Suzanne