pwbet gaming Yes, It’s OK to Use the Fine China

Joan Didion once said that she used her “good” silver every daypwbet gaming, because “every day is all there is.”

That line, which was uttered to a reporter from my newspaper almost half a century ago, was brought to my attention this month, after we published the story of the 100-year journey of one family’s china, and readers poured their thoughts, and their memories, into the comments section. The use of fine china — and of other accouterments associated with formal supper, like silverware — has been on a downward slope for over a century, and in a nosedive in recent decades.

The forces that are causing the decline are numerous, including that eating now occurs at kitchen islands, on couches and in office cubicles. Data collected by the Hartman Group, a market research firm, concluded that nearly one-third of dinners last year were consumed by people eating alone. When friends and families gather, they do so on the back patio or in the living room,bl777 for barbecues or Super Bowl Sunday, with food served on plates that can be microwaved and stacked in the dishwasher afterward.

The fancy china — if families have it at all — remains locked behind glass. One way to fight the trend, readers said, was to do away with the formality and use it every day — “use the china until it breaks,” Paul Sheldon wrote.

ImageThis fine china bowl has been in Ashley Dumulong’s family for over a century.Credit...Scott Ball for The New York Times

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More bleak headlines follow: “Bidenomics FAILED.” “Bidenomics is a RECORD FAILURE.” “Americans’ incomes down THREE STRAIGHT YEARS.” “Unemployment RISING.” “America may soon be in a RECESSION.”

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