Remember When

tonywar

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If you're not smiling by the end of this, then what were you doing when you
were young?
Just for a minute, forget everything stressful and read this...............

Close your eyes and go back in time...
Before the Internet...
Before semi-automatics, joyriders and crack....
Before SEGA or Super Nintendo...
Way back.......
I'm talking about Hide and Seek in the park.
The corner shop.
Hopscotch.
Butterscotch.
Skipping.
Handstands.
Football with an old can.
Fingerbob.
Beano, Dandy, Buster, Twinkle and Dennis the menace.
Roly Poly.
Hula Hoops, jumping the stream, building dams.
The smell of the sun and fresh cut grass.
Bazooka Joe bubble gum.
An ice cream cone on a warm summer night from the van that plays a tune
Chocolate or vanilla or strawberry or maybe Neapolitan or perhaps a
screwball.

Wait......

Watching Saturday morning cartoons, short commercials or the flicks.
Childrens Film Foundation, The Double Deckers, Red Hand Gang, The Tomorrow
People, Tiswas or Swapshop?, and 'Why Don't You'? - or staying up for Doctor Who.
When around the corner seemed far away and going into town seemed like
going somewhere.
Earwigs, wasps, stinging nettles and bee stings.
White dog shit.
Sticky fingers.
Playing Marbles. Ball bearings. Big 'uns and Little 'uns.
Cops and Robbers, Cowboys and Indians, and Zorro.
Climbing trees.
Building igloos out of snow banks.
Walking to school, no matter what the weather.
Running till you were out of breath, laughing so hard that your stomach
hurt.
Jumping on the bed. Pillow fights.
Spinning around, getting dizzy and falling down was cause for giggles.
Being tired from playing....remember that?
The worst embarrassment was being picked last for a team.
Water balloons were the ultimate weapon.
Football cards in the spokes transformed any bike into a motorcycle.
Choppers and Grifters. Eating raw jelly. Orange squash ice pops.

Remember when...

There were two types of trainers - girls and boys, and Dunlop Green Flash -
and the only time you wore them at school was for P.E.
You knew everyone in your street - and so did your parents.
It wasn't odd to have two or three "best" friends.
You didn't sleep a wink on Christmas eve.
When nobody owned a pure-bred dog.
When 25p was decent pocket money
Curly Whirlys. Space Dust. Toffo's.
Top Trumps.
When you'd reach into a muddy gutter for a penny.
When nearly everyone's mum was at home when the kids got there.
When any parent could discipline any kid, or feed him or use him to carry
groceries and nobody, not even the kid, thought a thing of it.
When being sent to the head's office was nothing compared to the fate that
awaited a misbehaving student at home.
Basically, we were in fear for our lives but it wasn't because of drive-by
shootings, drugs, gangs etc.
Parents and grandparents were a much bigger threat! and some of us are
still afraid of them. Didn't that feel good?

Just to go back and say, Yeah, I remember that! Remember when....

Decisions were made by going " Ip Dip Dog Shit "
"Race issue" meant arguing about who ran the fastest.
Money issues were handled by whoever was the banker in "Monopoly".
The worst thing you could catch from the opposite sex was germs.
And the worst thing in your day was having to sit next to one.
It was unbelievable that 'British Bulldog 123' wasn't an Olympic event.
Having a weapon in school, meant being caught with a catapult.
Nobody was prettier than Mum.
Scrapes and bruises were kissed and made better.
Taking drugs meant orange-flavoured chewable aspirin.
Ice cream was considered a basic food group.
Getting a foot of snow was a dream come true.
Older siblings were the worst tormentors, but also the fiercest protectors.


If you can remember most or all of these, then you have LIVED.

Pass this on to anyone who may need a break from their "grown up" life...

I DOUBLE-DARE YOU


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Jools_of_Top_Cat

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oh gawd another mid life crisis /forums/images/icons/smile.gif

missed white dog poo
free milk
doing the dishes stood on a stool
scrumpin
conker fights
building go carts by finding old prams on the rubbish dump

<hr width=100% size=1><font color=blue> Julian </font color=blue>

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BrendanS

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I get about 20 a week of these things by email, and I think nothing of them. Just hit delete This one actually hit the mark. Sad really.

Missed the grocery van that would come twice a week, the horses that came to the end of the garden for food when it snowed, real sweet shops that sold nothing but sweets including sherbert in many colours and tones. Nothing about exploding bolts or swings over the river though, or paper darts that took weeks of experimentation to perfect. Walking over the pipes over the river...that would be bannned these days. The Cresta Run on trays or belly boards each time it snowed.
Holidays in the UK before everyone started going abroad (I'm not going to give away my perfect places because there are too many going there already)

Eek!

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B

bob_tyler

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(For those born before about 1940)

We were born before television, before penicillin, polio shots, frozen foods, Xerox, contact lenses, videos and the pill. We were before radar, credit cards, split atoms, laser beams and ballpoint pens, before dish-washers, tumble driers, electric blankets, air conditioners, drip-dry clothes...and before man walked on the moon.

We got married first and then lived together (how quaint can you get?). We thought ‘fast food’ was what you ate in Lent, a ‘Big Mac’ was an oversized raincoat and we had ‘crumpet’ for tea. We existed before house husbands, computer dating and ‘sheltered accommodation’ was where you waited for a bus.

We were before day care centres, group homes and disposable nappies. We had never heard of FM radio, tape decks, artificial hearts, word processors, or young men wearing earrings. For us ‘timesharing’ meant togetherness, a ‘chip’ was a piece of wood or fried potato, ‘hardware’ meant nuts and bolts and ‘software’ wasn’t a word.

Before 1940, ‘Made in Japan’ meant junk, the term ‘making out’ referred to how you did in your exams, ‘stud’ was something that fastened a collar to a shirt and ‘going all the way’ meant staying on a double-decker bus to the terminus. In our day, cigarette smoking was ‘fashionable’, ‘grass’ was mown, ‘coke’ was kept in the coalhouse, a ‘joint’ was a piece of meat you ate on Sundays and ‘pot’ was something you cooked in. ‘Rock music’ was a fond mother’s lullaby, ‘Eldorado’ was an ice-cream, a ‘gay person’ was the life and soul of the party, while ‘aids’ just meant beauty treatment or help for someone in trouble.

We who were born before 1940 must be a hardy bunch when you think of the way in which the world has changed and the adjustments we have had to make. No wonder there is a generation gap today …. BUT

By the grace of God... we have survived


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G

Guest

Guest
Yes, indeed, all those things are gone. In their place, those of us of a certain age find:

Your car must have four doors.
You no longer think of speed limits as a challenge.
You enjoy watching the news.
You no longer laugh at 'Preparation H' adverts.
Your arms are almost too short to read the newspaper.
You only buy shoes with good soles.
The only reason you're still awake at 2 am is indigestion.
People ask you what color your hair used to be.
You dream about prunes.
You browse the bran cereal section in the super market.
You've started taking cod liver oil again, like in childhood.
You start worrying when your supply of Deep Heat is low.
You have more than two pairs of glasses.
You read the obituaries daily.
Your biggest concern when dancing is falling.
You enjoy hearing about other people’s operations.
You wear black socks with sandals.
You know all the warning signs of a heart attack.
Your chemist knows you by your Christian name.
Snoring is no longer funny.
You can't remember where you put your last list.
You're the first one to know where the toilets are wherever you go.
You and your partner begin discussing separate bedrooms.


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hlb

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Re: No-one Ever Mentions

Has anyone ever heard of it?

What about every one going to school with iodine all over there faces.

mums spitting on hankies to wash your face.... Orble that was!

Proper pens, we used as darts, ink wells and blotting paper.

I've still got the blue in my hand from where the pen stuck in it!!

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tcm

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Re: Rosetinted rubbish

Of course, all kids should have had a great childhood. But lets not run away with the idea that the fifties -senties were utterly great, as we had...

rubbish cars
unaffordable air travel
hardly any motorways
no disposable nappies
no kids tv apart from rubbishy Blue Peter
no cartoons except on bank holidays
power cuts
cold houses with no double glazing, no duvets, not much central heating
very heavy leather footballs
hardly any sweets
nasty food
horrid wine ever-present threat of nuclear and conventional war
credit squeezes



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tcm

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Re: Rosetinted rubbish

hm. I think the producers thought they were cute. But it took eighteen years or so until a baby grew up and confirmed that, no, not even the very youngest actualy understood a blimmin word...

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bigmart

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Re: Plus Torchy the battery boy nm

OK now were getting into the modern age how about Twizzle, Muriel Young & Bert Weedon. Ah those were the days!

Martin

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