It all depends on which opinions or which topics they cover, and of course the information that feeds into them. Some of them I still stick with, others I do not. Information can change over time, so opinions that are based on them can also change. Additionally, personal experiences have a hand in whether or not opinions change or stay the same. When we became empty nesters, for example, it was new for us. Even though I may have had preconceived notions about what it would be like, once I actually began living it, that reality helped formulate certain opinions that were not there before. That’s partially relayed to getting older, but it’s also an allegory on life itself: one’s opinions can remain as they are or evolve, and that can happen in short periods of time at any point in life, or it can happen as a result of aging and all the elements that go with that.
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Well, if I were to focus on and use the word you used, “re-examine”, at various times throughout my life, there are opinions of mine that I have re-examined, sure. Has it happened more often or less often as I have gotten older and gained more experience in life? Meh, that’s hard to say. Life events have their imprint on me, I really have to say my re-examinations may have the same frequency now as they ever had, it’s probably the level of or the depth of that re-examination that’s hard to define. I’m an extremely analytical person overall, I would like to say I’m also introspective, but I think I ignore or dismiss a lot of turning the mirror to myself.
When I went overseas for the very first time, I was 19 years old, when I returned to the States, I was 20 years old. I remember a letter I wrote to my mother as the ship was steaming* across the Pacific eastbound, I stated something to the effect of, “socially and politically, I don’t care about some things that I used to care about, and I do care about some things that I didn’t used to care about”.
When I got married, when I became a father, when I hit milestones in my military tours of duty, when I experienced culture shock of leaving Hawaii after five years and going to rural North Carolina for the next three years, when I left military service and became a civilian again, when I was in a roll- over car accident, when I raised teenagers, when COVID19 hit, when I was placed on mandatory retirement, , etc., etc., etc., I have had many instances of changed opinions throughout the years.
Your question is not only interesting, thought-provoking and intriguing, it’s philosophical too.
*It’s just an expression.
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