My mother in law who died in her mid 90's five years ago always did what her husband (who died in the late eighties) told her to do:
He told her to buy "baloon tires" (probably told to him a hundred years ago from some old codger who didn't appreciate hard rubber tires or wooden buckboard wheels) so she had radials removed from her car and replaced with old tires with inner tubes.
He told her to never look at channels above 13. Probably because he was too cheap to pay the extra $2 for UHF rabbit ears in 1954. She was enjoying something unknowingly on channel 46, asked my daughter what channel it was and cried and cried as she honored her husband's wishes by switching to an infomertial on channel 12.
She adjusted to color TV, since he was still alive and apparently approved of it, but always refused to even glance at LED screens, if it wasn't a CRT tube she'd advert her eyes. Had to search long and hard for a tube tv to give her. Also, when she was living alone, she'd call in a "TV repairman" to hook it up-- probably for more money than the TV cost. Guy was still in business a decade ago, probably serving only octogenarians and up.
I'm in my seventies and spend my time porting Ubuntu Mate to old Windows computers. Now I have to ask myself if I'm becoming a Luddite for not simply accepting Win 10.