I thought this article did a pretty good job of summarizing how my worldview has changed with time:
http://www.openculture.com/2018/12/b...-grow-old.html
At one time I'd happily argue with anyone about anything... regardless of how much I knew or didn't know about a subject. I see now that a lot of that is largely pointless, at least on the internet (comment sections, forums, etc) as people aren't terribly open-minded and objective (even if they say they are) in most digital arenas.
That and I just enjoy absorbing information. I always have... as a kid I was terribly unathletic (thin and active, but horribly uncoordinated), but I found just about EVERYTHING interesting. I'm still pretty uncoordinated physically, but since my thirst for just about any kind of knowledge has continued to grow, it's also absorbed an interest in physical fitness that has served me well for the past year or so... I'm still uncoordinated and clumsy, but at least my body can pick up and put down heavier and heavier things without asking too many questions.
Overall though, I agree with Russell about that widening of perspective... the older I get, the more and more I know and am interested in, but less and less am I emotionally invested in each individual thing. I find myself nearly incapable of powerful emotional outbursts at this point. I'm not zen master, and I don't aim to be... it's just "happened". I find bad things "sad" but not crippling. I find funny things "amusing" but not to the level of absurd. I find injustice "frustrating" without jerking a knee.
I do like the comfort of my nest... the place (mentally and physically) I return to time and again but I still enjoy eating every new thing or just giving something a shot that I know I have no real hope of being good at. I'm fairly "siloed" in that my religion IS my culture, effectively, but at least that religion is fairly ethnically/culturally diverse... I'd probably not have as much exposure to those if not for it.