“Okay let’s say it again: it would help me call people, but it but not directly. It was a stage in the process. Calling people was a multi step process. Not simple like it is nowadays.”
I once explained to my then teenage son that the elderly’s memory is like a rolodex. We’re not loosing our memory, as we get older we have more cards on our rolodex and it takes longer to find the card. His response was “What’s a rolodex?”
Instead of a Rolodez Grandpa had a long metal box with a slider along an alphabet on the side. When you pressed a button on the end it would open to the names and numbers under whatever letter the slider was one.
Daeder over 1 year ago
And if you want to erase the cards, just pick up the rolodex and shake it like an Etch-A-Sketch!
David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace over 1 year ago
“Okay let’s say it again: it would help me call people, but it but not directly. It was a stage in the process. Calling people was a multi step process. Not simple like it is nowadays.”
LawrenceS over 1 year ago
Really hard to butt dial anyone back in the days of Rolodex.
jagedlo over 1 year ago
and hopefully, your handwriting was legible…
Ellis97 over 1 year ago
The twins still have a lot to learn.
crookedwolf Premium Member over 1 year ago
Remember memorizing everyone’s numbers..?
RussHeim over 1 year ago
Remember the rotary dial?
dimndno over 1 year ago
I once explained to my then teenage son that the elderly’s memory is like a rolodex. We’re not loosing our memory, as we get older we have more cards on our rolodex and it takes longer to find the card. His response was “What’s a rolodex?”
gcarlson over 1 year ago
Instead of a Rolodez Grandpa had a long metal box with a slider along an alphabet on the side. When you pressed a button on the end it would open to the names and numbers under whatever letter the slider was one.
mafastore over 1 year ago
My husband still uses one of our rolodexes. It was a small house one – a little tray not a big round one.
He keeps his assorted passwords on the cards so he can find them!