..yes and the sheer volume of traffic would horrify my mother who died in the early 70's... also the foul language used by kids these days in public in normal conversation.. she would be horrified.. as I am to be truthfulHow fast people drive now. You do the speed limit, and you've always got some cowboy in a truck sitting right on your back bumper.
you should have told them this was as high tech as it got...Whenever my teen daughters would complain about their cell phones, I'd say...
"Do you know what I had at your age?? Do ya?!"
BALL IN A CUP!!!
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Like you Holly my parents were long separated by death. Mother died in 1956 aged just 33. Dad went on for 55 more years, passing at the age of 92. My mother would have been blown over by the concept of the supermarket.My father lived until 2008 so he was around for the internet etc.. but was horrified that people would pay ££'s for a coffee.. in a coffee house.. but he would be fascinated by Amazon prime etc..
My mother died in the early 70's...she never saw or even imagined the Internet.. home computers, Remote control everything.. she would have loved to have had remote controls to watch TV.. to have 1000 channels as we have here today.... and she would have loved the joy of shopping online, and especially for groceries after years of hauling food on foot.. for 6 people!!
I'm sure both of them would have taken full advantage of Youtube..
that can't be right HC.. because when I was kid in the early to Mid 60's.... we used to shop in Fine Fare and in Safeway.. they were both large supermarkets, and I had to go every weekend to help my mum with the Shopping. It's where I grew to hate Supermarket Musak.. we had a small Co-op across the road from where we lived, and that was still an over the counter service.. but we only used that for small items.. we always went to the supermarket at weekends..Like you Holly my parents were long separated by death. Mother died in 1956 aged just 33. Dad went on for 55 more years, passing at the age of 92. My mother would have been blown over by the concept of the supermarket.
Here in the UK it was 1967 when Britain’s first real supermarket, Gem, was established in West Bridgford, Nottingham. They had actually opened three years earlier, pioneering an American concept of one-stop shopping, where a vast range of goods were available under one roof. It heralded the growth of out-of-town shopping centres and brought tough times for the traditional corner shop.
You are probably right Holly, I worked for Green Shield Stamps in the late 60's and remember the Tesco deal. I Googled first UK supermarket.that can't be right HC.. because when I was kid in the early to Mid 60's.... we used to shop in Fine Fare and in Safeway.. they were both large supermarkets, and I had to go every weekend to help my mum with the Shopping.
I don't know if you're 'pulling my leg' or not, but I told him it meant Sport Utility Vehicle.I'm still trying to figure that one our myself, dobielvr.
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