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Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
CuriositiesMAY 14, 2023

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered

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The passage of time has its way of obscuring things we once saw as commonplace. Day-to-day routines and distractions chip away at our memories, so when something happens over a long period of time, we end up just missing it. Unless someone points it out, a lot of subtle changes end up ignored. 
One internet user was curious about what things people noticed disappearing quietly without much attention. The answers were illuminating, relatable, funny, and at times sad. So get comfortable and read through people's answers, make sure to upvote your favorites and comment your own ideas if you feel inspired. 

#1

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Shame in politics. Politicians used to resign in disgrace if caught taking bribes.
568points

#2

The COVID quiet.
You remember how quiet things were? When we all just took a chill pill? I remember.
Everything is loud again. From streets to stores. Sidewalks. Everything is loud. I couldn't point to when it happened, it just disappeared. And nobody seems to talk about how nice the quiet was.
548points

#3

Appliances that work for 20 years.
Thanks, planned obsolescence!
501points

As a young millennial (or a zillennial, depending on who you ask), I still remember getting toys in cereal boxes, indeed, these actually would motivate my choice of product. Let’s face it, most kids’ breakfast cereals just taste like sugar anyway. But a casual walk down the grocery aisle reveals that toys are just not part of the deal anymore and honestly, it makes me a bit sad, even if it was mostly trash plastic. 

The primary reason was actually safety. Food and toys don’t really mix, and having plastic items inside a bag where an overeager child might drop them into their bowl ultimately isn’t the best of ideas. Interestingly, there haven’t been any reported cases of a child actually dying, but it shouldn’t take a freak accident to implement basic safety concerns.

#4

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Being able to buy software products etc without needing a “monthly” subscription for f*****g everything.
Edit: For all the “Oh yes we noticed” comments. I get it. It wasn’t an instantaneous thing. But I’m still salty about it. Thank you for your input though.
435points

#5

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Livable wages. Ten years ago. You could work a min wage job maybe a couple bucks more and still afford a 1 bedroom apartment while living a pretty chill life. My goal as a kid was simple. Make 60K a year and get a nice little apartment. Have savings and live happy. Here I am making 80k a year and renting a room that costs as much as a full apartment used to cost. Paying for a tank of gas that used to cost me almost half as much. Paying for food for a week that costs as much as my mom used to get on food stamps for the whole month. Everyone accepts this now a days as life. I’m over here still hoping some huge market crash happens and everything “resets” to an OK economy.
394points

#6

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Critical thinking.
As Benjamin Franklin said: "People will believe everything they read on the internet."
359points

The other reason is a lot more mundane, kids are not that interested in physical toys. Firstly, digital playthings are a lot more dynamic, interesting, and generally of higher quality than some plastic in one’s Captain Crunch. And the physical toys they do enjoy are often more complex in nature. Doubtful that someone will find a whole NERF gun in a cereal box. Now, if you look closely, you can find codes for digital goods and even movie ticket lotteries inside cereal boxes. Also diabetes.

#7

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
CD/DVD drives in laptops.
353points

#8

That most people can never see *Milky Way* or the beautiful *night sky* anymore, it eventually got buried under the light pollution.
There was once a time when our ancestors struggled to count the stars.
320points

#9

Saturday morning cartoons.
308points

On a more pleasant note, acid rain is gone. Mostly. While it sounds like something from a sci-fi dystopia, it was a very real symptom of climate change that we overcame. Basically, our electricity generation, animal agriculture, factories, and motor vehicles all added chemicals into the atmosphere that would lower the pH levels of rain. While it remains an issue in areas that don’t really care too much about the environment, signatories of the 1985 Helsinki Protocol on the Reduction of Sulfur Emissions have all benefited from reducing or eliminating this issue. Hooray for us. 

#10

Someone answering the phone at businesses.
305points

#11

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Acid rain.
Huge win for environmental action. Identified a problem, raised awareness, and implemented solutions that have mitigated most of the harm.
jdsekula reolied:
Same for the Ozone layer.
Not yet for climate change…
281points

#12

My hometown published its final paper a couple weeks ago and then shut down the printing press and went to online only.
It's been such a slow death of the newspaper that nobody seems to have noticed at all.
276points

One that adults will, unfortunately, encounter more and more is the tendency for most products to be replaced with subscription services. From the business side, this makes a lot of sense, where keeping a customer for over half a year will already yield more profit than selling something as a one-off. Plus it’s more predictable, regular, and brings in consistent cash flow. On the consumer side, it sucks. We pay more, we have to figure out ways to cancel subscriptions when we want it to stop and it tricks our brains into spending a lot more than we need. 

#13

Fireflies aka lightning bugs.
I live rural and I used to see hundreds on a warm summer night.
Now I get excited if I see just one.
I mentioned it to other people who live in the same area as I do and they were just like "Huh. Yeah. You're right!"
260points

#14

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Attention spans.
259points

#15

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Toys in cereal boxes.
EarlGrey_Picard replied:
More importantly toys in Cracker Jack. Hell, they don't even come in a box anymore, they come in a bag.
251points

Others mentioned technological fads like 3D television which, thankfully, have mostly gone away. Yes, at the time they were very interesting, like an innovative way to view media, it’s pretty clear these were just a fad. Most 3D programs halted broadcasting in 2012, rendering the further development and sale of these TVs pretty pointless. While perhaps it’s sad to see this avenue no longer explored, truthfully, it wasn’t that great in the first place. 

#16

The need to remember phone numbers.
242points

#17

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
A common pop culture (in the US, at least). Until at least the 80s, most people watched the same TV show, saw the same movies, listened to the same music, could recite the same commercial slogans or jingles, bought into the same fads.
I don't know when it happened, but now we are all siloed into highly specific subcultures.
227points

#18

Panama/Paradise papers.
Loads of high profile people were discovered funneling their taxes through offshore tax havens like the Cayman Islands.
I can’t believe this isn’t the main thing we hear about every day in MSM. The culture wars are a distraction from the top .0001% robbing the world blind.
222points

#19

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
I never see swarms of Monarch butterflies anymore.
207points

#20

Someone Asked “What Eventually Disappeared And No One Noticed?” And 84 People Delivered
Somewhere along the way 9-5 turned into 8-5.
TwoIdleHands replied:
Yeah when I hear the song I’m like “Wait, did they get paid for lunch? Or just eat at their desks? Or did they actually not work 8 straight hours?”
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194points
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