Middle Aged Memories

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  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited June 2010

    If I say I remember riding in a rumble seat I'll really sound old, but when I was a kid someone in the neighborhood had (an already classic) car from the 40's and he let some of us kids ride in the rumble seat. 

    Much later, when my own two kids were screaming in the back of my Honda, I can truly say it is a shame that the rumble seat is no longer an option!

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    My parents drove from CA to CO in a stationwagon when I was a few months old.  They went tot the furniture store and picked up a refrigerator box, cut it down (10 inch sides) and placed it in the back of the car for me to ride in.  Car seats were only for the convenience of letting the baby see out of the window.  They were not a safety device.

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    My car seat was a plastic and steel framed chair that hung over the front seat. The seat belt was thin plastic. So much for safety!  My mom also had a car bed for my older siblings. Some how we all survived without seat belts, helmets, knee pads and our parents smoking in the car.

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    I find it sad now that these young mothers can place their baby in a moulded seat, carrry the seat to the car, snap the seat into the car seat, go to her destination, grab the plastic seat out of the car snap it into a set of wheels and stroll away.  what happened to body contact, cuddling, and holding?  maybe babies should have a handle installed at birth for their parents convnience.

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    No kidding! I use to wear my kids in a front or back pack or a sling. I would cook and vacuum with someone on my hip. Rarely do you see babies being held and they're usually in some type of seat or swing. It's really sad because all people need physical contact.

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    They have found that in orphanages overseas, that babies tend to have attachment disorders because they do not get held for the sake of being held.

    We were in the church nursery Sunday and I had three of my little ones who rotated turns on my lap, one on each knee at most times.  I get as much out of that as they do.  Amazing how sitting in the floor with them close and a hand around them or one right up next to me can keep them calm.  They love the touch.

  • NativeMainer
    NativeMainer Member Posts: 10,462
    edited June 2010

    I remember my mother talking about learning how to do everything with one hand when children are little.  One hand and arm was always holding/carrying/corralling a baby or toddler.  I can remember my aunts always had one of their childrend, usually the youngest on one hip.  I wonder if you might have a point, Meece. 

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    When I helped out at my grand-daughters preschool, we were sitting in a circle on the floor. Several little ones managed to wiggle their way to sit right next to me. I always held my kids and I could see these kids wanted to crawl in my lap. Maybe I have that new grandma smell!

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    Okay, here could be my link to BC.  I tended to carry my babies and do my housework at the same time.  Thus, I also nursed more on my left breast because I am right handed.  I would much rather have the baby in my arms than to plop a bottle in his mouth.  My bc was on the left, the more used breast!  My boys seem to be pretty well adjusted.

    I only got a carry seat with DS#3 because he was ill, and I had to keep him in an upright position.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited June 2010
    smithlme, ha-ha-ha "new grandma smell."
  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    When people ask what the percentages are for getting cancer I tell them 50/50. Either you will get it or you won't. Those percentages don't mean very much to me at this point!

    My favorite T-shirt...."I walked in The Komen 3-Day and I STILL got cancer!" Some people have no sense of humor!

    Remember the last day of school and the whole unplanned summer lay before you?

  • kk69Z
    kk69Z Member Posts: 167
    edited June 2010

    Tiddly Winks, Jingle Jump and the magic man where you pulled grey stuff up from the bottom of the board with a magnetic wand and gave him hair and facial hair. How about razzles gum and big buddy gum and pixie stix. The cool toys you got in cerial boxes and cracker jacks. You could get a set of glasses or a place setting of dishes for filling up with gas at the gas station. And they looked under your hood and washed windows. The photo booth, 4 pictures for a .25. Getting your feet measured when you went to the shoe store. Its so nice to go back.

  • Laurie_R
    Laurie_R Member Posts: 262
    edited June 2010

    how about garter belts and nylon stockings. Artic Circle where you had them make cherry coke before there was cherry coke, chocolate dipped ice cream cones with nuts. Ratted hair.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited June 2010

    Is Big Buddy gum the one that was a rope about a foot and a half long?

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    Saving Bazooka Joe comics to redeem and send in for special toys.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited June 2010

    Nevermind.  The one that I was thinking of (that one cool teacher allowed us to keep in the pencil space of our desks) was called Bubs Daddy.

  • suzwes
    suzwes Member Posts: 1,740
    edited June 2010

    Milk delivered to our door - we had a metal container outside of the door and the milk man would deliver fresh milk in glass bottles and eggs a couple of times a week.  It was really good milk!

  • Mybails
    Mybails Member Posts: 29
    edited June 2010

    A brand new Vega $3,333.00 and a car bed for the daughter - 1975 bliss.

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    I remember the car adds for $4999.00  for a brand new car, and that sounded so expensive!

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited June 2010
    I'm having a middle-aged memory about my first "Mr. Potato Head."  It was a REAL potato!  The toy first came out with only plastic parts and you had to use your own real potatoes, the plastic potato came out a little later.  (I made Mr. Apple Head and Mr. Banana Head on occasion.)
  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    I had a plastic mrs. Carrot and a cucumber I think....

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    Sure enough, I found a picture!

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    The eyelashes were felt with hole for the eyes to poke through.  Wow I didn't remember how hokey they looked.  I saw an image for your potato head parts that you put on real vegies, too!

  • Sugar77
    Sugar77 Member Posts: 2,138
    edited June 2010

    I recently found a nostalia candy shop and picked up a few treats for my daughter. I've been surprising her by giving one or two things a week and she's having a lot of fun trying "old people" candy. I picked up the following:

    - BB Bat suckers

    - Candy Buttons (dots on white paper strip)

    - Razzles

    - Gold Rush gum

    - Thrills gum (taste like soap) 

    - Wax moulded soda cans with liquid inside

    It brought back so many memories of going to the store on Saturday night's in the late '60s/early '70s with my 25 cents of allowance and buying all sorts of candy!

    Sherri 

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    I saw Toy Story 3 on Friday and Mr and Mrs Potato Head are still funny! My kids use to use the parts and make veggie heads all the time.

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    We got our allowance on Saturday mornings.  Then a 7 block walk to "The Quick Shop"  to pick out our penny candy.

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    We had "Bruce's Variety" by our house and it had a large penny candy selection. Candy bars were a nickle so a quarter would get a lot of goodies. We also brought back glass bottles...2 cents for the small ones and 3 cents for the large ones.

  • Meece
    Meece Member Posts: 19,483
    edited June 2010

    Did you ever go on pop-bottle drives as fundraisers?  Then when we were finished we'd take a pick-up truck full of bottles to the store for redemption.

  • smithlme
    smithlme Member Posts: 1,322
    edited June 2010

    The Boy Scouts use to do those. We'd search for bottles for candy money!

  • Sugar77
    Sugar77 Member Posts: 2,138
    edited June 2010

    Our store was Buds Variety. We used to ride our bikes down to Buds to turn in our pop bottles and buy candy. We'd put all the bottles in the little baskets on our bikes that went over the front handles. Sometimes we stop to hunt for snakes at the Dairy Queen woods on the way home.  Lots of fun!

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