CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL THE KIDS WHO WERE BORN IN THE 1940's, 50's, 60's and 70's!!

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CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL THE KIDS WHO WERE BORN IN THE 1940's, 50's, 60's and 70's!!

First, we survived being born to mothers who smoked and/or drank while they carried us.

They took aspirin, ate blue cheese dressing, tuna from a tin, and didn't get tested for diabetes.

Then after that trauma, our baby cots were covered with bright colored lead-based paints.

We had no childproof lids on medicine bottles, doors or cabinets and when we rode our bikes, we had no helmets, not to mention, the risks we took hitchhiking .

As children, we would ride in cars with no seat belts or air bags.

Riding in the back of a van – loose - was always great fun.

We drank water from the garden hosepipe and NOT from a bottle.

We shared one soft drink with four friends, from one bottle and NO ONE actually died from this.

We ate cakes, white bread and real butter and drank pop with sugar in it, but we weren't overweight because......

WE WERE ALWAYS OUTSIDE PLAYING!!

We would leave home in the morning and play all day, as long as we were back when the streetlights came on.

No one was able to reach us all day. And we were O.K.

We would spend hours building our go-carts out of scraps and then ride down the hill, only to find out we forgot the brakes. After running into the bushes a few times, we learned to solve the problem .

We did not have Playstations, Nintendo's, X-boxes, no video games at all, no 99 channels on cable, no video tape movies, no surround sound, no cell phones, no text messaging, no personal computers, no Internet or Internet chat rooms..........WE HAD FRIENDS and we went outside and found them!

We fell out of trees, got cut, broke bones and teeth and there were no lawsuits from these accidents .

We played with worms and mud pies made from dirt, and the worms did not live in us forever.

Made up games with sticks and tennis balls and although we were told it would happen, we did not poke out any eyes.

We rode bikes or walked to a friend's house and knocked on the door or rang the bell, or just yelled for them!

Local teams had tryouts and not everyone made the team. Those who didn't had to learn to deal with disappointment. Imagine that!!

The idea of a parent bailing us out if we broke the law was unheard of. They actually sided with the law!

This generation has produced some of the best risk-takers, problem solvers and inventors ever!

The past 50 years have been an explosion of innovation and new ideas.

We had freedom, failure, success and responsibility, and we learned

HOW TO DEAL WITH IT ALL!

And YOU are one of them!

CONGRATULATIONS!

You might want to share this with others who have had the luck to grow up as kids, before the lawyers and the government regulated our lives for our own good.
 
Hear Hear:thumbs::thumbs:
 
How very true, and very sad
 
So true. Makes you think doesn't it?
 
That's quite amusing, but incredibly true that's the sad thing about it. i don't remember anyone getting stabbed in the town where i grew up, no drug or gun problems and the neighbours would give us a smack if we were naughty (and I often was :) ).

Do Gooders do more harm than good i'm sorry to say !
 
And all those born since are welcomed into the world by the "Nanny State"
 
Bravo, its about time we all stood up and kicked some ass if you ask, i for one am sick of being second to everyone else in this world because of the PC brigade, and this teacher in sudan malarky has my blood spilling over.

I was born in the Fifties BTW, bloody great childhood too, yes parents were strict back then, but it kept us in check, unlike today when most parents just let there children run riot.
enough said..
 
Get with the times people :lol:

I wish it was as safe as that when I was younger :(
 
Well said well said :thumbs::D:woot::woot::woot:
 
So basically its 'OUR' fault for creating a nanny State.

You cannot blame the kids today for anything. We have let it happen.

Its OK to shout on about 'in my day we would have..........' but why don't you do something about it.

Its 'Our' fault because we as the baby boomers have become incredibly reliant on others. There is no fear left in the world.

In the thirties when a certain man was running around Europe the whole nation stood as one to stand up against him. Now when our leaders try and stop a fight 'We' say 'don't do it as its wrong to interfere'

Look at yourself before blaming the kids, its the easy way out, just what we are used to.
 
Brings back very fond memories does this.
What made me really think about it was the " dissapearing all day" bit, I had a fantastic time doing just this, and sometimes I did see my dads headlights coming towards us if we had overstepped the mark by staying out after dusk.
It was called FREEDOM and I loved every bit of it.
 
So true, times were good :)
 
1942 was a good year.
we were winning a war to enable the future of this country
to go forward.
to date in my opinion, even with all the tech. advances,
this counrty has gone to the dogs.
i know hardship, and served my country and my Queen, in the forces.
The youth of today disgust me. all they think about is themselves.
Sorry if i have offended the do gooders but they shoud get there act together. A good hard wallop never hurt me and i do not have a criminal record at 66 years old.
Get out there and do something for the good of the country and stop expecting everything to be done for them.

Inother words .....GET A B......y LIFE
 
Maybe I'm in the minority but i was a late 80's baby and i did a lot of the things mentioned above.
 
This isnt a serious thread, t'is a funny one :D
Just a giggle at how things have changed.
 
This isnt a serious thread, t'is a funny one :D
Just a giggle at how things have changed.


Yes it was great growing up in the 40s and 50s especially if you were poor, all the above is true but remember the bog at the bottom of the yard shared with 6 other families and no lights at night just a piece of burning newspaper and god was it cold in the winter, no hanging about or your dangly bits were endangered. In the summer there was always something to read as the ever versatile newspaper would have its last incarnation as torn pieces of 6 x 6in on a bit of string hanging from a nail on the back of the gate like door. Its previous uses being to read on Sunday, a table cloth, each page being turned over to use it twice, waste not want not and all that. It would be rolled up and stuffed into the leg of grannies old bloomers an used as a draft excluder, mashed up with flour and water and used to gob cracks and holes in walls and window frames then painted over, it would be ripped into tiny pieces and dug into the compost, used to line leek trenches, put in your shoes to mend the hole in the sole, pulped and mixed with coal dust and other burnable stuff then compressed in a piece of old cast iron drain pipe, dried out and used as a coal substitute, and we had to get up two hours before we went to bed to walk six miles to school through leech infested swamps delivering those f-kin papers on the way and all because we were born too soon. I for one welcome the way we live now.
 
LOL. I was a war baby me, (1943) and I remember the rationing for years after the war. It couldn't have been easy for parents raising kids in those days. The world has changed out of all recognition -we're all so much better off, but we've certainly lost our sense of values along the way.

Hands up everyone who can remember their mom's Co-op Dividend Number.:D

(121985)
 
Yeah I agree with all those things.

I remember getting a clip round the head by the local copper. If I had went home and said anything, it would have meant another clip for getting into trouble!!!
 
I was born in the 80's and did all that,... Though I grew up in a small town in Ireland and electricity was just being installed.

I see where it is going and totally agree. Kids are useless these days. I recently moved and my TV, DVD and surround sound and all my DVD's are packed into my now new study. The door is locked and it is adult only use (waits for the bad jokes). Simply because I want my daughter and future kids to enjoy the outside world and not wake up in the morning craving crappy TV.

Here we have snow, hot summers and awesome wildlife. Get out and enjoy it. Its a shame that other kids are stuck inside though but that only means I am out doing it all again too! hehehe.
 
Ok i have to admit i agree with much of what has been said. I was born in 77. I currently work with children and the area i work in covers some very rich and very poor areas. I have to say this has little effect on the abilty of the children to behave approiatly. Its mostly to do with disaplin or lack of it. Giving your children bounderies and punshing them when they cross the line as a toddler will mean by the time they are 5yrs they will have lernt to respect authority, and rules. If you try to prtect your child from the big bad world too much they wont learn the social skills to live in it. If your let your chidlren run wild they wont learn respect for themselves or others.

Do gooders need to learn that what is right for one isnt right for the rest of the world.

I have seen that email before and both times it has made me think. My sister born in 1980 has a very different out look on life to me and expects to be looked after but then by the time she was at secondary school many play ground games had been band along with a lot of other stuff and the school was well on its way to being full of do gooders.
 
I was born in the 80's and none of the manual things described above have affected me in anyway. My parents are old fashioned and I'll be the same with my kids. It's the recently born and future generations you need to look out for. That is if they make it through the next ice age.
 
1984 was a great year...
Well I do admit there some morons born that year, but I don't think it would have been an exceptional number.

Laziness is my biggest problem and has been one ever since, but unlike some of the other kids of the eighties, I've learned a few lessons.
Then again, I was never particularly attracted to smoking, drinking, taking drugs or shrooms. In fact, I haven't tried any of that (alright, I admit I have drank half a glass of wine every half a year while I was at high school... and a bit of egg liquor on Christmas sometimes and a third of a glass of champagne at the end of the year... as in 31st of December, replaced by a non-alcoholic beverage last year).
I've had a couple of fights at primary school, but I think that about one of them even the teacher was kind of fond of XD
All that and now I'm nearly a pacifist these days.

I blame the cartoons and movies I watched, the books I've read (oh yeah, there were plenty :D) and perhaps that my mum cares so much it used to tick me off most of the time.

When I ask for something, I try to think why I need it thoroughly.

Perhaps I'm spoiled, but at least I don't go on a rampage like many youngsters with dim wits these days.
 
:woot: What a blast from the past! born in early '70's, Thanks, for reminding me how much fun I used to have as a kid! :lol:
 
Do Gooders do more harm than good i'm sorry to say !

That said it in one for me, I might be younger (Prepered for a beating :P) so i shouldn't know this but i do.

Me and my mate was out on our bikes and someone had reported the bike he was sitting on as stolen. So the copper comes up to up, infact there was two and one of them says "Would you mind getting off that bike please sir"

Like come on, That is being too soft i think. and "please sir" :O what was that dude on.

Can anyone tell me what they would have said if it were to happen back in them days?

Tony
 
:thumbs: brought back some :D memories, now Im :'( as its all gone..... lost in thought.... brilliant :thumbs:
 
Nostalgia is a thing of the past. Let's leave it there. Every generation yearns for the past, for one simple reason. You only ever remember the good times. Would I like to go back to the time I was born the 40s, not a snowball in hells chance. life is to easy now.
My working life stared on the docks, from 15-18 you were guaranteed a weekly wage,
When you reached 18 and you had your NDLB ticket you were at the mercy of the pen master, You would turn up for work every morning, only to be told by the most ignorant man I have ever met, sorry cocker nowt for yer. For this you would have your book stamped Attendance proved, and you would get the pricely sum of 8s/3d, 41p. for 1/2 a days pay. Then you would turn up again at noon, and more than likely get the same response. No wonder there was so much unrest on the docks.
Would anyone put up with these conditions today, I very much doubt it.
 
We shared one soft drink with four friends, from one bottle and NO ONE actually died from this.

People actually share a soft drink!:eek:

Man, I'd fight for a soft drink like a man would fight over a woman If someone tried to take a sip of my soft drink.:p


So then, since the 80's, 90's and 00's children where and are raised from the presvious ones, then this would make them responsible for what that article thingy Is complaining about.:rules::p
 
One of the best things I remember from the past is the amazing Smiths Curry crisps :D who remembers them ;)
 
One of the best things I remember from the past is the amazing Smiths Curry crisps :D who remembers them ;)

Don't remember them but do remember the Fish n Chips that were more biscuity than crisps.

That were soo nice too :D

And whatever happened to that fizzy drink "Quatro"?
 
Don't remember them but do remember the Fish n Chips that were more biscuity than crisps.

That were soo nice too :D

And whatever happened to that fizzy drink "Quatro"?

:lol: I remember fish n chips too but corona was the fizzy pop of the day ;) And what about fry's five centres chocolate bar like the Fry's cream bar but with different flavour centres.
 
:lol: I remember fish n chips too but corona was the fizzy pop of the day ;) And what about fry's five centres chocolate bar like the Fry's cream bar but with different flavour centres.

I feel old :(

Didn't ya get money back for the "empties"?
 
I feel old :(

Didn't ya get money back for the "empties"?

You're right you did, and milk bottle weren't throw away like now. companies should look at just how green we all were back then ;)
 
Hands up everyone who can remember their mom's Co-op Dividend Number.

:wave: Born 1944. I can, it was 128, quite short and easy to remember, she must have been in the front of the queue in Oxford for that number. I can even remember having a clip round the ear from a Police Officer. Had I gone home and told my dad, he would have given me a good hiding! :bat::thumbs:
 
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