Posts Tagged ‘Willis Carrier’
“Any kid will run any errand for you, if you ask at bedtime”*…
Truly, bedtimes are one of the great injustices of American childhood. Turns out, they’re also a pretty good example of how sleep — a biological need that we can’t live without — is intertwined with the much more subjective vagaries of culture. It’s culture, after all, that convinced my parents that I needed to be in bed by 7:30 p.m. in July. And my still slightly simmering resentment of that fact, while anecdotally pretty normal among my late Gen X/early millennial American peers, might not be universal…
Hit the hay on your own time at: “Don’t Tell The Kids, But Bedtime Is A Social Construct.”
* Red Skelton
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As we move into the arms of Morpheus, we might celebrate one of the greatest contributions to a good night’s sleep: on this date in 1902, Willis Carrier completed drawings for what became recognized as the world’s first modern air conditioning system. He kept improving his design… and in the process created the air conditioning industry.
Written by (Roughly) Daily
July 17, 2017 at 1:01 am
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged with air conditioning, bedtime, Carrier, childhood, history, HVAC, invention, social construct, Technology, Willis Carrier
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