Familiar Skills, New Audiences

dany3

Member
Mar 4, 2025
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When an activity people learned at home quietly follows them into adulthood through technology, it blurs the line between tradition and modern habit. Why do we keep treating it as something new when, for many players, it’s simply a continuation of what they already know?
 

Maxx3

Member
Mar 5, 2025
37
0
6
Because context shapes judgment more than history. When a familiar skill appears on a screen, people assume the activity itself has changed. An article on https://projectrethink.org/why-holi-rummy-is-breaking-stereotypes/ highlights how this shift is mostly about visibility and access, not reinvention. What was once private becomes observable, regulated, and shared with wider groups. That exposure reframes it as routine rather than questionable, replacing inherited assumptions with lived, everyday experience.