#294595 - 01/17/20 02:18 PM
When I was your age...
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Geezer
Registered: 06/02/06
Posts: 5359
Loc: SOCAL
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I found this article courtesy of my browser feeding me stuff I’d never go looking for. It’s a good article and food for thought Your best childhood memories probably involve something today's kids will never experience ... ”The ability to take risks”... I grew up in the 50’s and 60’s so when the author discusses the freedom of growing up in the 70’s and 80’s, I gotta smile.
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#294596 - 01/17/20 06:45 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Russ]
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Geezer in Chief
Geezer
Registered: 08/26/06
Posts: 7705
Loc: southern Cal
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Ah..the things we had in the "good old days" -polio, smallpox, stick shift cars without those bothersome seat belts, football games ending in a tie - the list goes on and on.
To some, things were always better way back then. Mostly, they were just different.
_________________________
Geezer in Chief
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#294597 - 01/17/20 07:31 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Russ]
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Veteran
Registered: 08/16/02
Posts: 1208
Loc: Germany
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I grew up in the 70´s and 80´s and there is some truth in the article. My parents often had no idea where I was when I was not at home. That was quite normal. I usually had some mechanical puzzles or kits assembly required as gifts for my niece and nephew. It took some effort to keep my sister from helping the kids with it. To her it was not easy to understand that the gadget was not the actual gift. Gadgets like radio receivers or bat detectors are so much nicer when you soldered them together on your own. It´s really ironic that some parents would deprive kids of success by trying to ensure that they do not fail.
_________________________
If it isn´t broken, it doesn´t have enough features yet.
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#294598 - 01/17/20 08:16 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Russ]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 04/28/10
Posts: 3172
Loc: Big Sky Country
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I see some truth to the article. Maybe it was my small time upbringing but more was probably the lack of the technology that's ubiquitous today (primarily the cell phone). Helicopter parenting wasn't technically feasible to the degree it is today when children as young as seven or eight have their own cell phones. Likewise we didn't have the internet and 24 hour cable news pumping fear of The Other into our home day and night. Certain there were dangers out there like there's always been but it wasn't front and center in our daily lives. We walked to school (when we lived in town) and would now be called "latchkey kids". When we lived in the country we rode our bicycles five miles to the local stock pond to fish for bass and bluegills. We went out unsupervised with our rifles and shotguns (!) to walk the draws hunting rabbits, etc.
There are probably rural areas where this still occurs but much of what was normal childhood experience would now result in a call from CPS. It's a very different world now. Sure, I'm glad I don't need an iron lung and until the anti-vaxxers ruin it at least many childhood diseases are gone.
It seems like we should be able to keep the best part of the freedom we used to have while enjoying the advances we have today. That balance is hard to find in our post-9/11 surveillance state.
_________________________
“I'd rather have questions that cannot be answered than answers that can't be questioned.” —Richard Feynman
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#294602 - 01/17/20 09:40 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Russ]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 11/13/06
Posts: 2989
Loc: Nacogdoches, Texas
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Growing up from the late 1980s to the early 2000s, I'm perhaps the closest to the current generation without being able to understand them. I did not use the internet regularly until I was fourteen and I did not own a cell phone until my early twenties.
Jeanette Isabelle
_________________________
I'm not sure whose twisted idea it was to put hundreds of adolescents in underfunded schools run by people whose dreams were crushed years ago, but I admire the sadism. -- Wednesday Adams, Wednesday
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#294604 - 01/17/20 10:13 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Herman30]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 11/13/06
Posts: 2989
Loc: Nacogdoches, Texas
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I was using computers since I was five (1991). All we had was the Disk Operating System, which was a command-line interface.
I was first introduced to the internet in school when I was eleven (1997), using Windows 95.
Edit: I remember learning how to use Windows from the book Kermit Learns Windows.
Jeanette Isabelle
Edited by Jeanette_Isabelle (01/17/20 10:18 PM)
_________________________
I'm not sure whose twisted idea it was to put hundreds of adolescents in underfunded schools run by people whose dreams were crushed years ago, but I admire the sadism. -- Wednesday Adams, Wednesday
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#294664 - 01/23/20 06:49 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Russ]
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Old Hand
Registered: 09/12/01
Posts: 960
Loc: Saskatchewan, Canada
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Back in the '60s and '70s: Hay rides Visiting Dad as a family when he was at the farm summer fallowing Jumping off the garage just because Climbing trees Pet rabbits dying Dog running away Camping with the family Camping with CSB troop x several times Building a raft and poling it around a pond Playing "ditch" until the curfew siren sounded, then keep playing until 10 pm! Lighting fires in back yard Building a hobo stove and showing people how to cook eggs on it when I was 8 Having a plane do an emergency landing at the farm Catching my first fish BB guns and getting shot in the chest Building bean shooters from clothesline pins Hanging my towel up to dry on the clothes line after swimming lessons First kiss Shooting arrows in the back yard Playing with real steel tipped lawn darts and never getting hurt Mowing the lawn a bazillion times I was always the one to light the BBQ (Mom was afraid of this!) Getting the "strap" in grade 1 Writing "I will not...." on foolscap as punishment x many times Tossing hay bales Driving farm equipment before old enough to drive car Helping Dad with building various things around house Learning to bike (by myself!) Learning to skate and trip and fall and trip and fall Kickball contests - hitting a 10' wide goal from 75 yards! Building model rockets and flying them Riding on an ice boat Building a darkroom for Shop class Excelling at technical drawings for Shop class Converted bedroom closet to a darkroom at home Sticking my tongue on the flag pole (long before I saw Christmas Story!) Real chemistry sets with stuff to blow up! Microscopes and telescopes Many generations of pet cats Breaking my collar bone / chin Chipping my teeth Getting sick with EVERY childhood disease imaginable Smallpox vaccine Breaking my right arm Breaking my big toe Breaking my glasses multiple times Being chased by wasps Camping in the back yard under a bed sheet when I was 5 Waking up in the middle of the night so my brother and I could fix the bunk beds so it wouldn't fall on me Watching the moon landing - LIVE Watching Vincent Price movies, B horror flicks on TV Watching movies back when the had Comics, Preludes, & Intermissions in the theatres Spending 5 cents on candy bars, penny for 4 double bubbles, stubby cokes for 7 cents, full size cokes for 10 cents, comic books for a dime Ice cream floats Many ice forts Several underground dirt forts Hanging around EVERY house being constructed in town Reading shelves worth of books
Yep, growing up was fun.
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#294668 - 01/23/20 10:24 PM
Re: When I was your age...
[Re: Roarmeister]
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 11/13/06
Posts: 2989
Loc: Nacogdoches, Texas
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When I was eight, I learned how to cook simple dishes such as tuna mac, wash laundry (I learned by reading the box of powdered laundry soap and reading the directions on the inside lid of the washing machine), and help Grandma with her oxygen therapy.
Later, when my cooking skills improved somewhat, I learned how to make hot cocoa the old fashion way (from scratch), and I created a new recipe: french-toasted peanut butter sandwiches.
Jeanette Isabelle
_________________________
I'm not sure whose twisted idea it was to put hundreds of adolescents in underfunded schools run by people whose dreams were crushed years ago, but I admire the sadism. -- Wednesday Adams, Wednesday
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