Middle Aged Memories

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  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited June 2014

    Yes....Adult as in R rated. I think I was 13. Saw it with my Mom. I remember watching it and feeling embarrassed. LOL

  • heartnsoul76
    heartnsoul76 Member Posts: 1,648
    edited June 2014

    Oh, Stuckey's!  They were even started here in Georgia (i.e. we had a LOT of them) and my family never stopped there. My roommate at UGA even knew the Stuckey family and couldn't believe I had never been there.  Are they out of business now?  I feel like I've missed out on an important childhood milestone.  NOW I want a pecan roll... Oh well, another childhood trauma I'll have to relive for the shrink, haha

    The first adult movie I ever saw just about knocked my socks off and if you want to see a young, full-frontal nakedness, absolutely beautiful Don Johnson I highly recommend it!  I was 16 years old and my friend worked at the local movie theatre and we got in for free.  It was called "The Harrod Experiment".  Talk about your 70's free love fest!  So, so much nudity and partner-swapping.  I was.... I don't know... stunned?  But I sure had a crush on Don Johnson after that.  

  • heartnsoul76
    heartnsoul76 Member Posts: 1,648
    edited June 2014

    In the late 60's all the girls in my area wore these white fur coats.  I don't know why but we all wore them and I remember some guy said we looked like polar bears - haha, he was right.

    And of course, we had to have John Romain purses.  I had this one and three others, plus some John Romain sandals which my ex-SIL stole from my closet.

    image

  • NativeMainer
    NativeMainer Member Posts: 10,462
    edited July 2014
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    heartnsoul, I'm not sure if Stuckey's is still in business or not. Can't say that I ever saw the Don Johnson movie. Sounds like it's a good thing I didn't!!

    Here's one. Does anyone remember click-clacks???? I about knocked myself out with this toy when I was a kid. This would never fly now-a-days.

    image

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    yes, I do! Even remember pouring the liquid solution/catalyst into molds to make "grapes" 

    -

    Remember these?

    image

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014
  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    you got that right!

    Often thought those click clanks led to that desk-top gadget where small metal balls are suspended, pull one back, release, the opposite end flies out, then the opposite, ad infin item... Cool for a couple moments, then boring

  • NativeMainer
    NativeMainer Member Posts: 10,462
    edited July 2014

    Lets see if pics will post this morning: 

    image

    I do remember the Click Clacks, must have driven our parents crazy! 

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2014

    I remember Op-Yop.  We were smart kids...we made out own with giant buttons on a thread cord, from Grandma.

    image

    Looks like these are still in production, and they got pinkified.  Eeeek!

    image

  • staynsane
    staynsane Member Posts: 213
    edited July 2014

    SlowDeep- YES!  I loved clackers (not click clacks to me).  Especially my swirly pink ones.  I must have had three or four different colors.  Easily amused, I guess.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    I have never seen op-yop.

    Anyone remember colorforms? Now this is something I had!

    image

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    yes, Slow! 

    Native Mainer, that's it, exactly!

  • NativeMainer
    NativeMainer Member Posts: 10,462
    edited July 2014

    I remember doing the buttons on string thing, loved the way it hummed when you got it going fast enough.  Don't remember the Op Yup, though.  I'm shaking my head at the pinkified version. 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    Anyone remember these?

    image

  • Loral
    Loral Member Posts: 932
    edited July 2014

    Yes I wore them and I remember them hurting my head....

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    Slow, never used those. Very fine hair and very little of it. I envy you and all that could use them 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    I used to use them on my dolls too.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    never thought of that! Lol,

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2014

    I might have had a barrette or two but, in my house, pony tails were held in place by plain hair-snagging rubber bands, the kind that came off of a shopping news.  I kept them on the doorknob in my room.  A hair fashion that lasted a year or two was wearing a little triangle head scarf.  My cousin sewed some up for me.

    image                      image               image

       

    Speaking of newspapers...we used to have a paper boy for the daily news and those papers came folded up in that special way.  They gave the boys that coin change thing to wear on their waists on collection day.  Think we used to pay .35 for the week.

    image  We never had a papergirl.     image

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2014

    My mom got me the penny collector book.  I still have it.

    image

  • MinusTwo
    MinusTwo Member Posts: 16,634
    edited July 2014

    My Mother braided my hair every day through 6th grade.  When I went to Jr. High I switched to pony tails & I too used plain old rubber bands.  

    We had a coin changer just like that.  My grandpa told us that the train conductors & bus drivers used them.  My brother threw the local paper for awhile.  Girls weren't allowed, but I spent more time folding then he did.  And of course no plastic bags like we have now for the rain.

    I still have a couple of those triangle scarfs.  Eventually maybe I grow enough hair back to wear them.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    image

    Remember these?

  • Monis
    Monis Member Posts: 472
    edited July 2014

    Do they still make those Dr. Scholl's?  I had a pair.  They hurt really bad if you stepped on them wrong.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2014

    I was so disappointed that I couldn't wear the Dr. Scholl's sandal.  They were the flop without the flip for me.  Would not stay on right.  I had to have the flip-flop, or the thong-style, sandal.  As recently as three weeks ago, I tried on a sandal of the Scholl's style and still have the problem.

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2014

    I was making a smoothie yesterday when I remembered having one of these in the 70's...

    image

    Back then, yogurt was a health food craze.  I remember the t.v. ad for Dannon, with some Russians who lived to be 100.  It sure didn't take up a dozen shelves in the dairy case back then.  Making your own yogurt was a fashionable thing to do in the hippy lifestyle so, of course, someone figured they could make a buck selling the little heating units.  The yogurt came out  tasting o.k., but mine was always a little on the runny side.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    elimir, I've never seen the yogurts thing. Sounds interesting though!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    Remember the Salton bread warmer? I still have this and it works great for keeping rolls warm.

    image

  • elimar86861
    elimar86861 Member Posts: 7,416
    edited July 2014

    Probably the same heating unit in both of them!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2014

    I bet you're right.

    We were your typical Italian family so anything to do with bread and pasta we were all over!

    Yogurt was way too healthy for us.....probably why I don't remember that one! LOL

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