Self Congratulation

Parksy

Moderator
Nov 12, 2009
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I saw the following on an internet news website today and thought that some of you might enjoy...............................

'Congratulations to all my friends who were born in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.
First, we survived being born to mothers who smoked and/or drank sherry while they carried us and lived in houses made of asbestos.
They took aspirin, ate blue cheese, bread and dripping, raw egg products, loads of bacon and processed meat, and didn’t get tested for diabetes or cervical cancer.
Then, after that trauma, our baby cots were covered with bright coloured lead-based paints.
We had no childproof lids on medicine bottles, or locks on doors or cabinets and when we rode our bikes, we had no helmets or shoes, not to mention the risks we took hitchhiking.
As children, we would ride in cars with no seatbelts or air bags.
We drank water from the garden hose, not from a bottle.
Takeaway food was limited to fish and chips, there were no pizza shops, McDonald’s, KFC, Subway or Nando’s.
Even though all the shops closed at 6pm and didn’t open on a Sunday, somehow we didn’t starve to death!
We shared one soft drink with four friends from one bottle and no one died from this. We could collect old drink bottles and cash them in at the corner store and buy toffees, gobstoppers and bubble gum.
We ate white bread and real butter, drank cow’s milk and soft drinks with sugar, 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, but we were OK. We would spend hours building go-karts out of old prams and then ride down the hill, only to find out we forgot the brakes.

We built treehouses and dens and played in riverbeds with Matchbox cars.
We did not have PlayStations, Nintendo Wii and Xboxes, or video games, DVDs, or colour TV.

There were no mobiles, computers, internet or chatrooms. 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. And we ate worms and mud pies made from dirt, too.
Only girls had pierced ears.
You could buy Easter eggs and hot cross buns only at Easter time.
We were given air guns and catapults for our tenth birthdays, we rode bikes or walked to a friend’s house and knocked on the door or just yelled for them.
Not everyone made the school rugby, football, cricket or netball teams. Those who didn’t had to learn to deal with disappointment. Imagine that. Getting into the team was based on merit.
Our teachers hit us with canes, gym shoes and threw the blackboard rubber at us if they thought we weren’t concentrating.
We can string sentences together, spell and have proper conversations now because of a solid three Rs education.
Our parents would tell us to ask a stranger to help us cross the road.
Mum didn’t have to go to work to help Dad make ends meet because we didn’t need to keep up with the Joneses!
The idea of a parent bailing us out if we broke the law was unheard of. They actually sided with the law!
Parents didn’t invent stupid names for their kids like Kiora, Blade, Ridge and Vanilla.
We had freedom, failure, success and responsibility, and we learned how to deal with it all.
You might want to share this with others who grew up in an era before the lawyers and the government regulated our lives.

And while you are at it, forward it to your children, so they will know how brave their parents were.'
 
Mar 14, 2005
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Oh my Gosh

Where shall I start???????
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Aug 6, 2010
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I thought it was me he was talking about .... I remember it well.
We had lights on our bikes and made bonfires on bombed out building sites on the 5th of November.
 
Jun 20, 2005
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I well remember the dripping and salt on toast for tuesday evening tea. If you were lucky you got some of the gravy.
 
Apr 20, 2009
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Dont forget the tin bath in the freezing cold kitchen on a Sunday night with the whole family 2 parents and 7 kids sharing the same bath water, only topping it up from the gas geezer hung over the kitchen sink. And all this up until 1974 when we were allocated a council house.

Oh and the outside loo, remember once hanging a guy Fawkes up in the loo to frighten dad when he returned home from the pub only I forgot I put it there and had to go to the loo before he arrived home, man I sat in there in tears when it started to rustle in the wind.
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Apr 7, 2008
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I remember the Art teacher had a huge black plimsoll that he called OXO.....must have been size 15
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He would mark OXO on the sole in chalk .........
( this was always on a dinner time when he had caught some one smoking )
And would say touch your toes, brought many a tear to the lads eyes,
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& you had to go back at tea time to show it was still there, if it had rubbed off, you got another one
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............
Took a bit of explaining as to why you did not want to sit down in class for the rest of the afternoon
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Comes home
 
Oct 22, 2009
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Oh the good old days!!! Ice on the inside of the bedroom window and going to bed with more clothes on than in the day! Having stockings in American Tan,Evening in Paris scent,.sachets of shampoo instead of bottles. Blackberry juice all over faces and hands.Riding my bike alone for miles but being assaulted just a few yards from home. Coughing in the smog,Burning anything to keep warm.Chicken legs sticking out of paper carrier bags on the bus on Saturday afternoon.Never getting sun burn because of the grime.Running errands for elderly neighbours. Fire engines every week in the street putting out chimney fires.The rag and bone man with the day old chicks and gold fish.Saturday cinema for 7pennies and being scared of the big boys who wanted to be cowboys on the way home.
Have I really lived so long to go from this to seeing a man walk on the moon and us all communicating without actually speaking?
Thursdays Child
 
Dec 14, 2006
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Those old penny ice lollies where you sucked all the colour out of them. Frozen Jubblies! A season ticket at the swimming pool for five shillings, meaning you could go every night and sit there admiring the boys. Holding hands on the back row of the cinema - and lord help him if his hands 'strayed'! Arranging to meet someone, a week in advance, on the 'half past .................bus' - he'd be waiting at the bus stop, no problem - we didn't need a mobile, or even a phone in those days. The cheap buns when the bread shop was closing - a real Saturday treat when my Dad came back from the 'Bookies' on a Saturday. Mrs.. Moran was our local 'bookie' when it was still illegal! Fry's Five Boys, and the first chocolate machines. Buying sugar and butter from the co-op - the butter cut from a barrel shaped block, wrapped in greaseproof paper, and the sugar weighed out into a blue bag! Local shops where they could wrap cheese in greaseproof paper that looked so professional....! My first boyfriend, who had a motorbike, parking it two bus stops away, getting on the bus for two stops, meeting my parents.. 'What a nice boy', us going out, getting back on the bus (circular) and going back to the motorbike for a bike ride to Scarborough! They never knew he had a motorbike! My friend's first 'Dansette' record player - with Cliff Richard 'Travelling Light'!
Now I know I'm getting old - but how much worse must it seem for my 94 year old Mum in Law. At least we've adapted to the computer generation!
 
Oct 30, 2009
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hi all, oh yes remember all that,

and Morotbikes ridden without crash helmets,
and sportscars without rollover bars,or seatbelts.
and woobines at 2 shilling a packet.
and abolutely no health and safety at work.
and the reason why theres only me left out of 4 brothers 60years on.

sobering thought eh?
 
Aug 6, 2010
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Petrol 4 gallons for a £1.00, and 4 pints of Watneys Red Barrel as I remember and chips 3d for a shed load in newspaper, loads of vinegar and salt and who can remember the blue packets of salt in crisps.
 
Apr 7, 2008
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Surfer said:
in those daYS a gallon of petrol was less then 3 shillings (£0.30p)

30p = 6 bob in old money ( 6 shillings )
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Farthing:

Click here to see a Farthing
A farthing was the smallest unit of predecimal currency in the last 100 years. A farthing was one quarter (1/4) of a Penny. The last Farthing was minted in 1956.
Half Penny: (plural: Halfpence)
Click here to see a Half penny
As the name suggests a 'Half Penny' was worth one Half (1/2) of a Penny. So two farthings also make up half a penny. The last half penny for circulation was dated 1967.
Penny (or 1D): (plural: Pence)
Click here to see a Penny
The penny was really the basic unit of currency and had a lot more value than a modern 'New' Penny. There were 240 Pennies in a pre-decimal pound (£). The last penny for circulation was dated 1967.
Threepence (or 3D):
Click here to see a Threepence
The Threepence, or 'thropence' as it is also referred to was equal to three pennies. There were therefore eighty threepences in a pre-decimal pound (£). The last threepence for circulation was dated 1967.
Sixpence (or 6D):
Click here to see a Sixpence
Also called a 'Tanner'. Obviously worth Six Pennies. There were forty sixpences in a pre-decimal pound (£). The last sixpence for circulation was dated 1967.
Shilling (or 1/-):
Click here to see a Shilling
A shilling was worth twelve pennies. There were 20 in the pre-decimal pound (£). The shilling was replaced by the five new pence (1/20 of a decimal pound (£)). The last shilling for circulation was dated 1967 although they were used as Five pence pieces until the Five new pence (5p) coin was made smaller in 1990.
Florin (or Two Shillings, 2/-):
Click here to see a Florin
The Florin was worth 24 pre-decimal pence or two shillings. It was introduced by the Victorians in a step towards decimalisation, because it was worth one tenth of a pre-decimal pound (£). The last florin for circulation was dated 1967 although they were used as Ten new pence (10p) until the ten pence coin was made smaller in 1992.
Half Crown:
Click here to see a Half Crown
All the previous denominations have been worth double the denomination before them. That stops with the florin because the Half Crown was worth 30 pre-decimal pence (or two shillings and six pence). There were eight Half Crowns in a pound (£) The last half crown for circulation was dated 1967.
 
Dec 30, 2009
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My father, (born 1909) used to tell me of buying ROP (Russian Oil Products) at 11pence ha'penny a gallon, or going for the expensive stuff at one shilling (i.e. 12 pence)!! This would have been in 1928, when he and his brothers went shares in their first car, having had odd motorbikes before that.
 
Feb 7, 2010
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A tanners worth of chips and free scraps.
A thick ear from the local Bobby for being cheeky, and another one from Dad for getting one from the Bobby.

Les
 
Apr 20, 2009
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You need to learn to type!

Have you changed to IE 9? if so follow Parksy's advice Here if not then I dont know
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Jan 22, 2010
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Thanks you guys you`re the best i`ve been staring at this thing for 2 days like the stig did at that red 4 wheel drive thing.
i was trying to say that i remember those long hot summer hols spent in ditches and trees and a great game where you knock on someones door and run away they call it parcel force these days
thanks again
 
Jul 1, 2009
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get a life you lot hodies knifes drugs .drunks rape high fuel prices ect,ect who would want to live in the past (me)
 
Aug 4, 2004
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The farthing was still minted after 1959 in South Africa as our currency was based on £sd until about 1961. Our decimal conversion was direct. A 10 shilling became one rand. A pound sterling became two rand. Truppence was 2 1/2 cents. Thus 15/- was R1.50. It seems that the British currency was "compressed" on decimalisation.
 
Mar 14, 2005
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Just one thing wrong with that asumption, mum did have to go and work to make ends meet as dad was epileptic and couldn't work. No disability benefit then, despite serving 17 yrs in the forces and all through the 2nd ww. Never new the meaning of a holiday and a day out was once a year, if lucky and was curtesy of the local council. Free meals at school with brown tickets so everyone knew you where on freebies and going to school with thredbare trousers and holes in shoes. Nothing good about those days!!!!!
Wouldn't ever like to see those days again for myself, or my grandchildren.!!!!!!
We may think we have a namby pamby state, but isn't it why we try to improve for our children and grandchildren all the things we had no choice but to endure. Grieff, it's like saying to our future children, go fight a war, you will be much better for it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 

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