Nostalgia, like most things in life, has its fair share of pros and cons. Longing for the past can be very healthy in moderation. On the positive end of things, it can empower you, lift your spirits, remind you of your values and roots, and give you resilience to face the challenges you face today.
In short, nostalgia can be a source of optimism, motivation, creativity, and even a way to socially connect with others.
However, if left unmonitored and unmanaged, over-the-top sentimentalism can slowly consume your days and reduce the overall quality of your life in the present. You risk ignoring the positive relationships you could build and the opportunities you could take advantage of in the present because you’re so focused on the past.
As WebMD warns, if you let nostalgia take over and spend too much time reliving your ‘glory days,’ you might find it difficult to appreciate what you currently have in life.
So, it’s vital that you remember to keep your grip on the present and have at least a bit of optimism about the future.
A lot of different things, not just the totally awesome pics we’ve curated for you here, can trigger a wave of nostalgia. You can start feeling sentimental when you look through old photos, watch home videos, talk with your family or friends about the past, or approach anniversaries for important events like your graduation, birthday, or wedding.
Broadly speaking, there are two main categories of nostalgia: historical and personal. The former means that you’re probably dissatisfied with the present, and so, you’re yearning for a time in the past when society was different.
You might even yearn for a past that you never actually experienced. This is known as anemoia. For instance, some folks who were born much later than the 1980s might feel nostalgic about the decade just looking at these images.
On the flip side, personal nostalgia is fairly self-explanatory. It revolves around you revisiting your personal memories and the moments from your own life.
It sometimes feels like people are becoming nostalgic about more and more recent periods of history, without waiting for decades to pass. For instance, some young individuals genuinely miss the recent pandemic lockdowns, a time that, for many of us, was extremely stressful and full of fear and confusion. In the midst of the global panic, life ground to a halt.
“There was a simplicity to life. All of a sudden, you have no choice but to be where you are,” Toronto-based urban geographer Daniel Rotsztain told WebMD. The sense of togetherness and simplicity, however, quickly devolved into pandemic fatigue for many.
However, nostalgia can be useful in processing trauma.
According to Krystine Batcho, PhD, a professor of psychology at Le Moyne College, nostalgia can help people process and move on from traumatic experiences, like the pandemic.
“Nostalgia, the personal kind, has been associated with very healthy aspects of well-being such as empathy, compassion, forgiveness, social connectedness, belonging … anxiety reduction, continuity of self, [and] optimism,” she explained to WebMD.






















