Yesterday I was contemplating math. Today, demography. Technically still math, I guess.
According to the New York Times (seriously!), the average “Bachelor” viewer is a woman 51.1 years of age.
Moving on . . .
Yesterday I was contemplating math. Today, demography. Technically still math, I guess.
According to the New York Times (seriously!), the average “Bachelor” viewer is a woman 51.1 years of age.
Moving on . . .
My 13 year old daughter asked me last night, “How many years is a million days?”
We did the math: I started with the “Anne of the Thousand Days” trick: Anne Boyelyn was married to Henry VIII for 1000 days, which was about three years. So 1000 days = 3 years, which means that 30 years is 10,000 days and 60 years is 20,000 days and 90 years is 30,000 days . . . .
She took over the math from there. (She’s better at it anyway.) 300 years is 100,000 days. A million days is 3000 years. “People,” she said, “don’t live that long. Not even 100,000 days.” She sounded surprised. I was surprised — not in the shock and awe sense of surprise, not the flashbulbs-and-confetti-surprise-birthday-surprise, not the “OMG is that my college boyfriend here at the soccer tournament” kind of surprise. More like the: Hmmmmmmmm. We get about 30,000 days on this earth. Why the heck am I spending hours on the Internet catching up on “The Bachelor?”