What’s your “Back in my day, we…

My sister and went blackberry picking and baked pies. We gave one to our mother, and the other to our neighbor.

The national anthem played on TV before it was off air for the night.

We read, played outside, played with our dolls and other toys, and watched very little TV (my mom didn't like it much).

We ate our meals at home.

We knew all of our friends in real life.

Long distance calls were super expensive. Before cell phones were common, it cost $1/minute to call my friend in Vermont from Boston.

I paid my way through college by working.
 
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Another kid that grew up with blackcap and blackberry pies.

We also foraged for mushrooms, wild greens, wild strawberries. horseradish roots, etc... not because we had to, but because it was a country custom or tradition.

When we were little most of our summer meals came straight from the garden to the table.

My grandmother was part of the last generation in our family to grow up without electricity and mechanical refrigeration.

That meant that most fresh meat was available during the cold winter months. During the summer it was mostly bacon, smoked shoulder or ham, chicken, and the occasional hotdog.

By the time I came along a full range of foods were available year round but her habits and patterns had already been set for life.

There was a lot more good than there was bad in those years of my life. 😊
 
You were only given 30 seconds to open the refrigerator door. You had to look real quick! Costs too much electricity!

We hung the clothes out to dry, even in the winter. They were frozen, so we just stacked them over our arms like firewood.
Stood the levies up in the corner.

We had a bowl of water to "sprinkle the ironing". (make it damp for easier ironing)

Every morning we would cluster around the radio to listen to the "Halston Purina" hog prices. Never knew why.

We had to turn off all the lights and close all the curtains during a thunderstorm or a blizzard. Stay away from the windows.
Again, Made no sense!

Indians could not buy liquor because they couldn't handle it. Cowboys would stand outside the bars on the sidewalk in bunches.
Just stand. They hardly ever talked. Just stand there.

I could go in the bars when I was 10 years old and play pinball.

As a teen, recreation was partying, 'dragging main" or "drag racing". "Wolfman Jack" was THEE D.J. of all time!
 
I used to use something called Wite-Out to make corrections on a typewritten page. When I tell young people this, I realize that I am really old.
JB you would have loved how much I got picked on when I was first line supervisor and had my staff use white out, green out...whatever to neaten up their field records and reports when we were doing a study for CDC. My late, good friend who I worked with for decades and who was a PITA during our working years, teased me about that even after we retired. LOL :ROFLMAO: Now they have "white out" tape and I just bought a white out pen a few months ago.
@officerripley First I heard that expression...funny! I think I saw Liquid Paper not long ago somewhere. But the options I mentioned above work well..especially the pen, except not if you have a huge area to white out. I remember I used to pour nail polish remover into the bottle to thin it out.
 
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I still use it for craft projects. I wonder if they still make Liquid Paper brand? Anyway, whichever brand we had at work, everybody called it "idiot ink". 😄

I think there was one called Wite-Out and one called Liquid Paper. There was also a lot of fuss about the document called "the master" from which copies were to be made. It had to be protected at all costs.
 
My grandmother’s old farm house only had heat on the first floor.

I remember fighting with my sister for a place to stand on the furnace grate in the kitchen so I could warm up in the morning.

The forced air would inflate our nightclothes and we would stand there until the soles of our feet were starting to burn from the hot metal grate.😊
 
My grandpa made a circle from rocks he gathered and every night during the summer and early fall he would build a little fire while we gathered around it to talk or just watch the flames. Sometimes he would get it all fixed and ready to go right after he came home from work.
All it took was one match, no lighter fluid or fancy store bought logs to get it going.
My grandma would sometimes bring out a pitcher of homemade grape juice or ice tea that I have never been able to duplicate.
 
Picked a lot of berries and ate a lot of grandmas pies. We had chickens and eggs and meat was plentiful. Use to sit out on the porch and shoot rats, headed for the garbage house, with my single shot .410 shotgun.
We also only had heat on the first floor. My bedroom was upstairs and I became very familiar with lots of blankets and hot water bottle. Little puffs of snow, inside my window, was a common sight on those cold windy winter nights.
Also had a entity that lived in my closet..but that’s another story.
 
..we had half a pint of free milk at morning break in Primary School.
are you sure ?... ours was always a 1/3 of a pint ... ..and by the time the milk break came around, the milk was always warm and smelly ...*ugh*

milk_drinkers.jpg
 
We...my parents and I would go on the church bus rides to Rye Beach, N.Y. each year, probably up until my early teens. I didn't so much care about the beach part as the food and the rides.

And we...my friends and I (when I got older) sometimes went to Palisades Amusement Park which used to be located partly in Cliffside Park & partly in Ft. Lee, N.J. Again...the rides and food were the fun for me.
 
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are you sure ?... ours was always a 1/3 of a pint ... ..and by the time the milk break came around, the milk was always warm and smelly ...*ugh*

milk_drinkers.jpg
We had warm milk and graham crackers when we were in kindergarten.

We also had mats to take a nap on the floor.

I remember our teacher, an older woman, fell asleep one day during our nap time and we were all perplexed as to what we should do.
 
We had warm milk and graham crackers when we were in kindergarten.

We also had mats to take a nap on the floor.

I remember our teacher, an older woman, fell asleep one day during our nap time and we were all perplexed as to what we should do.
Oh the milk we got was in high school ( secondary school as well as primary school)... no crackers..
 
Back in my day...

In school:
In grade school, I remember standing up, placing my hand over my heart, and reciting "The Pledge of Allegiance" in class with the other students. I think there was a flag in the front of class that we would look at. Don't know if they do it nowadays or not.

We had no calculators for math. We used the "abacus" or mental calculation.

Everything we did in school was handwritten with pencil - homework papers, math formulas, essays, etc. Constantly having to sharpen our pencils in class with the pencil sharpener which was a boxlike sharpener with a handle.


Growing up:
Growing up in a large family and being poor, I remember the refrigerator often being empty. I was constantly hungry. Cleaned my plate because there were no leftovers.

Wore hand-me-down clothes that didn't fit and were out of style, and shoes that I outgrew and were often too tight.

I remember using the typewriter, and adding carbon paper for copies. Couldn't afford to make mistakes. Also used the white-out like the others here.
 
Back in my day...

In school:
In grade school, I remember standing up, placing my hand over my heart, and reciting "The Pledge of Allegiance" in class with the other students. I think there was a flag in the front of class that we would look at. Don't know if they do it nowadays or not.
I remember when "Under God" was put in the pledge, ruined the flow!
 
Back in my day, we lived in the City. At night a lot of the moms sat on their steps watching their kids. We could stay out as late as the moms did. Of course when we played Hide and Seek if a boy liked you he would tell you where to hide. Whichever boy found the girl he would get a kiss. Of course, the moms never knew that.
 
Back in my day, we played outside on days off. We once went to a vacant lot in the neighborhood, dug up a ton of dirt and put a box over the hole with a "door" cut into it to make a "fort". I grew up on a canal and we swam in it. We also climbed trees.

I was a heavy, clumsy kid. When we ran I always fell and got holes in the knees of my pants, so my mother would make shorts out of them. I was so frustrated that I couldn't wear bellbottoms because I would have to buy Huskies and the bell would need to be cut off. Then I went through puberty and a diet and graduated high school at 135 pounds. Wore all the bellbottoms I wanted!

My only real indoor activity was watching TV and playing 45's on my record player. I used to buy the latest songs at the Singer store in the mall. Why a sewing store would sell records was beyond me, but they had a good selection. I never missed an episode of Dark Shadows in the afternoon. I Dream of Jeannie, Bewitched, The Beverly Hillbillies and Laugh In were also staples.

I did have some "hooligan" friends, and in Junior High we skipped school and hung out all day at a 7/11. There was no fun in it, but kids do stupid things.
 


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