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  • Let's "geeze!"

    Although certainly not an Atkins topic, I thought it might be fun for this over 50 crowd to reminisce, a bit. One younger friend of mine would say we were "geezing!" Well, so be it. It's fun, whatever you call it.

    I grew up in a small town in the south, but I suspect that many of you had a childhood similar to mine.

    When I was a kid, I, and all of my friends, went EVERYWHERE on our bikes. They certainly didn't have anything useless on them, like a lock, but they did have the necessary stuff -- like playing cards attached with clothespins, so that they made a loud flapping noise when we rode.

    Of course, one place we often went to on our bikes was the little convenience store (do NOT think 7-11 -- far from it!) a mile or two away. There we might buy a candy bar and a 10 cent comic book (Superman was my favorite. Heaven was buying Superman, Batman, and The Green Lantern all on the same day!) or some Lik'em aid (in a small Kool-aid type packet. You poured it into the palm of your hand and licked it). Perhaps we might have bought the little wax "bottles" that contained a VERY sweet beverage (and chewed the wax afterwards, of course) or maybe we got ice cream in a little Dixie cup, with the picture of a movie star on the inside of the lid.

    Sometimes we'd go downtown with Mom, and we always wound up in the 5 & Dime. It had a hardwood floor, was not air conditioned, and the candy counter was always near the front of the store. To this day, I remember that unique smell, and it's just not one that's duplicated anywhere else. Sometimes they had lunch counters, and we'd have lunch there. The drugstores also had a lunch counter, and I remember if we were waiting for a prescription the pharmacist would give us a little coupon for a free Coke while we waited.

    Afternoons, especially summer ones, were for playing outside with friends. We'd often play really dumb games like Red Rover, Simon Says, or Kick The Can. Sometimes we'd skate on the sidewalk, using skates that attached to our shoes, and were tightened with a "skate key." As it began to grow dark, we'd sometimes catch fireflies ("lightning bugs" we called them) and keep them in a jar with holes punched in the lid.

    I get my gadget freakiness from my Mom, so I think we had our first TV by the time I was two years old, so I really don't remember radio dramas. But, I do remember sitting and watching the test pattern (the one with the Indian head) until the station signed back on at 5:00 pm, (there were no tv broadcasts during midday and early afternoon) and the first thing you heard was "Hey, kids, what time is it?" ("It's Howdy Doody time!") Then, a bit later on, Pinky Lee started coming on right before that.

    After a while, "Howdy Doody" moved to Saturday morning, and was followed by "Sky King" and "My Friend Flicka." I think I was about 10 years old when "Howdy Doody" went off the air, but I cried, anyway, when Clarabell said his only spoken words, "So long, kids!"

    The whole family planned Monday nights around "I Love Lucy." We had to be at home that night, and have the tv snacks ready and waiting. I vividly remember the neighbor from across the street visiting one afternoon and telling us that Lucy was in Italy and she was going to press grapes with her feet that night.

    I vaguely remember the shows "My Little Margie," "I Married Joan," "Our Miss Brooks," and "December Bride." Harry Morgan played Pete on "December Bride" and used to crack everyone up talking about his wife Gladys -- whom you never saw. Eventually there was a spin-off called "Pete and Gladys," but Gladys, in person, just wasn't nearly so funny as the one Pete always described in the earlier show.

    There was another kiddie show when I was quite small called "Winky Dink" It was a cartoon show -- the characters were little more than stick figures -- and you pressed a plastic sheet onto the screen so that you could draw on it with the supplied crayons. That way, you could draw a bridge, or a ladder, or whatever, to help Winky out of his predicaments. Mom decided that she'd better buy me the plastic sheet after she caught me trying to draw on the tv screen with a regular crayon.

    We got our first color set in 1964, and we were the only people I knew that had one. In retrospect, I think I just about drove my Dad insane trying to talk him into buying it. I think he finally did it just to shut me up! There were almost no shows in color at that time, except "Bonanza," "Walt Disney" and "The Flintstones," so, the dealer that we bought it from brought it out on Sunday night and finished setting it up just in time for "Bonanza." There were quite a few commercials in color -- during the black and white shows -- but, because you had to adjust the color each time you changed the channel, the commercials were usually all purple or green. By the time you got over to the set to adjust it, they were over!

    For a short period, I stayed with foster parents when I was quite young. They lived in a rural area, and had an old hand crank telephone on the wall. One day I moved a stool up to it and turned the crank; but, I turned it backwards and it came off in my hand! I was so scared because I thought that I was going to be really punished for that one. When I was about 7 or 8 I had cousins who lived up in the mountains of North Carolina, and their phones didn't have dials. When you picked it up, the operator asked what number you wanted. Sometimes the number was 47, or 83, or 112 -- there was no set number of digits! I don't think I saw a telephone that wasn't black until the mid-sixties, and, of course, it was probably after that before we had our first telephone that wasn't on a "party line."

    Those were the days when doctors made housecalls, and milk, in glass bottles with cardboard stoppers, was delivered to your back door. It was the days of service, when you stopped at the gas station and the attendant filled your tank, washed your windshield, checked your oil, and gave you a free glass or dish, along with Green Stamps. And all that for 24.9 cents a gallon.

    There are often times when I wonder how we ever made it without the Internet and cell phones. And there are times, like now, when I remember that we made it just fine, indeed.
    -Chris



    Male, 58 5'4"
    First time around: 218/147/135 -- 71 pounds lost
    This time around: 193.5/184.5/135 -- 9 pounds lost

    Down 33.5 pounds from highest weight

  • #2
    Wow wow wow. Your sure brought back some GREAT memories!! We had nearly identical childhoods.

    I lived in a very small town in New Hampshire and to this day, can't wait until DH retires so we can head back there.

    I remember the Church Socials and Strawberry Festivals. The entire town would attend and a band would play, us kids would run around and drive the adults crazy, and the food was devine!

    I remember the very first episode of GENERAL HOSPITAL. I watched it because it was the first time TV came on at 3:00 instead of 5:00!!

    We, too, went everywhere on our bikes. When school was out I was outside from the moment I got up until dark. We had 3 lakes within 5 miles of town, and all of us kids would bike to one of the lakes for the day. No parents necessary, because we KNEW that the adults who were at the beach would call our parents if we mis-behaved in any way! Oh, and in the winter? The school provided ski's and ski lessons at the local state park ski resort (Mt. Sunapee). We also had square dance lessons!

    Flag Day and Arbor Day used to be such big deals. Once I was chosen to recite (by heart!) "Flander's Fields". I still remember it:

    In Flanders fields the poppies blow
    Between the crosses, row on row,
    That mark our place; and in the sky
    The larks, still bravely singing, fly
    Scarce heard amid the guns below.... and so on.

    I attended a very nice 3-room school house, and got an absolutely incredible education. My first through third grade teacher brought her dog to the classroom, and is probably the person most responsible for my love of reading today. Every time there was a "school event" the entire town would show up. Eighth Grade graduation was standing room only, even though there were only SIX kids in my graduating class! I won the coveted Citizenship Award.

    There are neighborhood characters that stand out in my memory to this day -- TillyWheeler, the Avon lady who walked the entire length of town with her Avon suitcase. Mr. Cilley, the postmaster. "Champ" who was cashier at the grocery store. Mrs. Craigie, the town librarian (open Wednesday afternoon and Saturday mornings) who would come to your house to remind you if you had an overdue book!! Flossie Jones, mother of everyone, volunteer for everything, chairwoman of every committee, and all-around wonderful, loving lady. And Tommy Pitts, the young retarded man who lived with his elderly mother and whom the entire town adored and talked to with respect and admiration. Wonderful, wonderful people.

    I remember the crank phones, too. I would quietly stand next to it and crank it when no one was looking -- and Hazel Fisk, the town's phone operator who had a switchboard in her house -- would call our phone and ask if we needed something!! LOL

    Our phone number was 114. That's it. 114. We had a party line and I used to listen to the other party's phone calls as often as I could get away with it.

    I could go on forever... very very very nice memories. Thank you CV for bringing them back to the surface!!

    Joan J
    Re-Start 05/09
    F, 56, 255/248/160
    Quilter, wife, mother, grandmother, blogger
    Personal blog
    Quilting blog


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    • #3
      Well I didn't grow up in a small town, it was the suburbs on Long Island. Although, the relatives who lived in Queens used to ask how I liked living in the country. LOL

      We used to ride our bikes, with the playing cards, to the candy store for candy, (wax bottles too) comic books or Spaldeens (Spaldings), those pink rubber balls that were great for stoop ball or stick ball.

      Summer nights were for Kick the Can and Sunday evenings were for biking riding at the state park. We were accompanied by 2 dads from the block, not necessarily your own.

      I remember all those tv shows except December Bride. I remember getting our first color tv, but we didn't get it until maybe 1970.

      Crank phones, nope. Before living in the suburbs we lived in Queens. We were citified But we did have a 5&10 on the corner with the wooden floors and a soda fountain/ lunch counter. Al, the man who worked the counter would always ask if we wanted chocolate covered ants on our ice cream cones. Of course! They were the best part. And the cones were always sugar cones.

      House calls, milk that was delivered, better get it quick on the cold mornings or the milk would freeze and the glass would break. OMGosh, Green Stamps! We never seemed to collect enough to get anything. Mom didn't bother to keep them.

      Just going out to play was great. We'd disappear for hours on end and be home for dinner. Things have really changed now that most households are not able to have one parent at home all day. Prearranged play dates and kids signed up for 2,3, 4 or more activities seem to be becoming the norm. Geez!

      I'll take my childhood over the busy ones of today, thank you.
      Susanne
      female, 51 yo, 5'4"
      restart 8-1-06





      Comment


      • #4
        Great topic Chris.

        I grew up in Chicago and I remember...

        Burning rags in old coffee cans to keep the mosquitoes away.

        Playing a game called release with every single kid in the neighborhood.

        Taking the bus everywhere. My girlfriends and I were about 10 or 11 when we would go by ourselves to the show on the bus. No one worried.

        I remember racing home from school to watch Mickey Mouse Club, Cheyenne, Sugarfoot and Bronco Lane. Oh, almost forgot, The Three Stooges.

        These are just a few of my "geez" moments. I gotta go, the boss is coming!

        Martha
        Martha
        Started 03/29/04

        257/140/157 (Goal reached 03/26/05)

        Female/5'7"

        Comment


        • #5
          Taking the bus everywhere. My girlfriends and I were about 10 or 11 when we would go by ourselves to the show on the bus. No one worried.

          I remember racing home from school to watch Mickey Mouse Club, Cheyenne, Sugarfoot and Bronco Lane. Oh, almost forgot, The Three Stooges.
          Saturdays at the movies was a pretty frequent occurance for me. My best friend, Ray, and I would frequently go together. In those days there was always a cartoon, trailers, a newsreel, and sometimes a short before the main feature. And we just loved to go see that awful science fiction crap, but we knew when they'd finally hit on the right thing to kill the giant spiders, ants, 50 foot woman or alien because it would be about time for the movie to be over.

          One time we took Ray's little brother, Ed, to see King Kong. Ed was so frightened that he actually became hysterical and we had to leave the theater. It was years after that before I finally got to see the end of King Kong on television.

          Here's an interesting, rather sad, story about going to the movies. I have olive skin and tan very quickly and very, very deeply. When I was around 10, or so, I spent all day every day in the summer outside, usually without a shirt, and most of the time at the pool. (We were the only house in the neighborhood with a pool, so I was a very popular kid in the summer!) Anyway, that year I had my black hair cut into what we then called a "G.I," I guess we'd say crew cut, today. One Saturday Mom dropped me off at the movies while she was shopping and said she'd pick me up two hours later. Mind you, this was pre-civil rights in the deep South. When I bought my ticket I started to go into the theater and the man taking the tickets told me that I'd have to go up to the balcony (segregated seating). I protested that I was white, but he looked at me and said, "Boy, I can see what you are!" Well, I was a shy kid, and not about to argue, but I'd never been around black folks so I was too scared to go to the balcony. I just went back outside and sat on the sidewalk until my Mom came to get me two hours later. I assure you, though, that she had a few choice words for that theater manager. I really do think that that experience planted the seed of what's grown into a lifetime of pure hatred for any kind of prejudice or bigotry.

          Wow, how did I get off onto that?! Well, let's see, the Mickey Mouse Club. I used to love that show. I felt like all the mousketeers were my real friends, and I remember being amazed the year that Annette grew those breasts.

          I would watch it every afternoon, and wanted a set of ears so badly. A few months ago a friend of mine went to Disney World and asked if I wanted anything. I told her that I wanted a set of ears, so she brought me some. Hey, it took me fifty years, but I finally got them!
          -Chris



          Male, 58 5'4"
          First time around: 218/147/135 -- 71 pounds lost
          This time around: 193.5/184.5/135 -- 9 pounds lost

          Down 33.5 pounds from highest weight

          Comment


          • #6
            I grew up in a very small town in the middle of the Allegheny Mountains. Everyone knew everybody in the town and kept tabs of the kids all day. My cousins and I used to wander from one end of town to the other without a fear of being kidnapped or bothered by strangers. We used to go to the junk yard and they would cut the tops of the cars and stack them in a pile. We'd climb up and pull a few off and drag them to our houses. Our houses were small green tar-shingled houses lined up in a row alongside the Greenbrier River. Each house was exactly like the others. We'd use my uncle's old cans of left over paint and paint our car-tops. Then, we'd grab broken tree branches and use them for oars. On lazy summer days, we'd make tomato and mayonnaise sandwiches and put kool-aide in canning jars and float up and down the river. Sometimes we'd get sleepy and stop to lay on the grassy banks and take a nap. Our car-tops would be tied to trees along side the bank and bop up and down as we napped.

            Another thing we did was use the old out-houses as playhouses. When everyone started getting indoor plumbing, we'd yell claims to the outhouses, paint them with my uncle's paint and play for hours visiting each other, making curtains and lining our walkways with stones to make our area unique. We got old McCall Magazines and cut out pictures to hang in our little playhouses.

            My uncle was the first in town to get a color tv. Most of us didn't even have a black/white television, so there was quite a buzz when he came home with the first color set. He invited everyone down to his house on Sunday night to watch Bonanza. I remember everyone packed into his small house standing breathless as he pulled an old sheet off the box and turned it on. We watched as the Cartwrights rode through the burning map of Virginia City. As soon as the show was over, he quickly turned off the set and replaced the sheet. That was the only day of the week, the only hour that the tv was allowed to be on. He didn't want to wear it out.

            Every Saturday night, the town had a cake-walk. It was held at the tastee freeze. My grandma made the best cakes in the town and everyone wanted to win hers every week. On nights when one of us won her cake, all the cousins, aunts, uncles and friends would head to her house afterwards for coffee and cake. It was fun. The grownups would sit on the porch and talk while the young children played hide n seek and caught lightening bugs.

            I had the best childhood and love to think back on the simple days growing up. I could go on forever telling you tales about my childhood, there was the old man who walked the railroad tracks and Henry, the pig farmer, but I'll save those for another time. Things have sure changed.
            Starting Date 3/12/04 285/165/145 - F



            Dedication gives wings to our dreams and keeps them in flight! In One Word...COMMITTMENT.

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            • #7
              Wonderful thread!

              Let's see ....

              We lived in a platted community owned by the Baptist Church, on the river. They used to *invade* us for half the summer to stay in the *summer houses* (little bigger than shacks) that sat right next to the water and surrounded by a wall. We were not allowed to go anywhere near their area if we did not have dresses on. If you did, the guards would run us off.

              Falling off the top of the *big* slide and someone putting Kool-Aid, straight from the pack, onto my tonge to bring me out of it.

              All the houses had names, ours was called Chatterbox. No heat in the upstairs other than what came through the register in the downstairs ceiling. We had a long telephone number, 746-5705. Don't know why I remember that one, 40+ years later, when I can barely remember my current one!

              Cards & clothes pins on the bike, skate keys, *lightening* bugs in a jar, little wax bottles -- yep, sure remember them. Also, little bottles of Coke for a dime & 2 cent deposit, Milky Way's and Snickers for a nickle, trick or treating until you were 16-17 in homemade costumes - no store bought in those times. Remember one year my older brother (6'7" at age 14) dressing up in one of Mom's *house dresses*, makeup and a scarf (to cover burr haircut). Toboggans and sleds. Sunday afternoon -- going for a ride in the country after you had spent the afternoon at Grandma & Grandpaw's for fried chicken dinner, drive-in movie on Saturday night with the speaker hung on Dad's window. Climbing the mulberry trees and stuffing yourself sick with the mulberries. Playing baseball with all the kids in your block and picked last because I was just a little girl and Mom said my brother's had to let me play.

              When Dad came home from work, nearly everyday, we would start crying, because after he put his lunch box down and kissed Mom on the cheek, she would tell him what all we had done wrong that day. Usually ended with a trip to the bathroom and two or three whacks with the belt. He probably didn't hit us very hard, but to us it was excruciating. No such thing as child abuse back then! If we were stupid enough to slam a door or stomp up the steps within his hearing we would be made to open and shut that door or walk those steps 25 times without making a sound. If we were bad enough that Mom got after us, it was a switch to the legs and then Dad would get us that night.

              Everyone was at the table for breakfast and supper. Mom & Dad talked but the kids didn't unless you were spoken to. Bacon/ham/sausage/pork chops and eggs, biscuits and gravy, fried potatoes, pancakes or oatmeal for breakfast, (no cold cereal) meatloaf/pot roast/chicken & (homemade) noodles for supper. Toward the end of the week it was hot cornmeal mush for breakfast (eaten like oatmeal) then for supper that night it was fried mush, that was left over from breakfast, served with maple syrup.

              Mom always wore a dress, girdle, stockings - with the seam - and high heals and was dressed before she made breakfast. The only exception to this was Monday, laundry day. Then she was barefoot. Clothes were on the lines by 9 a.m. After the clothes were totally dry on the clothes line they were taken down and then sprinkled with water (go figure!), rolled up and then she would iron them, well into the night, after all us kids and Dad were in bed.

              OMG - I could go on forever! Thanks for the walk down memory lane!

              Rhonda
              Female/51
              Start 10/2/03 286/266/169
              Re-start 10/25/04
              Mini Goal 242 by 1/3/05

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              • #8
                OMG, I'm a geezer, too!

                Remember you dad bringing home huge Black Diamond watermelons in the summer that were so large you straddled them and rode them like a horse? They had to be iced down in a washtub. And the taste! All the watermelons today pale in comparison in size as well as taste.

                Remember having to go to the clothesline and bring in the clothes. They smelled ssssoooooo good! You had to fold the sheets and towels at the line and make sure they never touched the ground or you got in trouble and getting in trouble in those days usually involved either a little keen switch or a leather belt!!! Trouble was something you didn't want to be in for sure!

                Remember leaving the house after breakfast in the summer and no one wondered where you were as long as you showed up for supper? Sure can't do that now!

                We lived at the top of a long hill, and you could coast on your bike (with playing card firmly attached of course) all the way to the bottom (like about 10 blocks) or coast on our roller skates to the bottom. Going down was great, but then it was 10 long blocks back to the top! Oh, for the energy I had back then!

                Remember having a boyfriend and "trading discs"? And boy/girl parties where you played kissing games and "walked around the house" and got your first fumbly smooches? We were about 12 years old.

                Ah, those were the days!!!!



                female/ Age 60/5'3" Start Date: 1/12/04
                SW283/CW194/GW150/ 89 pounds and 75-1/2 inches gone/ 44 pounds to goal!

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                • #9
                  I was born and raised right here in Montgomery. My dad and grandfather built the house we lived in when I was less than a year old. It was a duplex and Me-maw and Paw-Paw lived in one side and we lived in the other. They spoiled me and my sister, to say the least, but mom and dad were thankful because they had built in baby-sitters for several years.
                  My dad was in the service and after my grandparents moved out of their side of the duplex, we rented it out to "strangers" to be able to pay the bills. My dad had gone to fight in the Korean War but with the "renters", we were never totally alone. They become like second parents to us. I remember them buying a vacuum cleaner ----- it was a Filter Queen and was big and round. As children we loved to play with it.

                  My mom sewed all the clothes for me and my sister. She was a good seamstress. I still love looking at old school pictures and remembering the dresses mom made. We struggled financially but I never remember going without anything of necessity. A new elementary school was built in front of our house and I went to school there from second through sixth grade. It was "neat" because I would wait until I heard the first bell and then run out the door before the final tardy bell rang. This made me feel special. When the crossing guard lady saw me come out, she would always stop the cars and let me run on across the street. She was a friend of the family. lol

                  I remember my first bicycle. My sister and I got one for Christmas. They were "second-hand" and dad had repainted them and fixed them up. We loved them and like others have said, we rode everywhere. When we got old enough, we would ride to the "Five and Dime" store and walk around for an hour or two trying to decide what to buy with our 15 cents. We bought a sling shot one time that got us in big trouble. lol

                  Gosh, I remember our first TV. I remember watching The Thin Man -- I think that was the name of it. There was a man on some show called "Mr. Topper" and he had a dog. I remember My Friend Flicka, Fury, Lassie and Mr. Green Jeans, and Captain Kangaroo. I remember being so scared of the Twilight Zone and the man who hosted it. lol I remember very fondly when they started a thing called "Saturday Night at the Movies" and they would play a "real" movie on the local station. We would always have friends over and eat tacos and watch the movie together EVERY Saturday night for years. I think I was in Jr. High school then. lol I also remember how good cold rootbeer floats tasted on a hot summer night at the A & W Rootbeer stand.

                  I remember sitting on the backporch of the house my dad & grandfather built and having to shell peas and shuck corn when mom would get back from the farmers market on Saturday mornings. She would "put up" corn, peas, beans, okra and squash every summer in the freezer. Actually, my mom "froze" everything she possibly could. We never wasted even a tiny mouthful of food. It went into the freezer. Even the loaf of bread. I remember eating my sandwich at school for lunch and sometimes the bread was still partially frozen. lol She still freezes everything to this day.

                  Speaking of segregation in the south, I went to school with one of Gov. George Wallace's daughters, Peggy Sue. She was in a couple of my classes. We graduated together but the school was VERY large and we didn't "run" in the same crowd. lol I remember the first black girl who came to our high school I think it was 1966 or 67. She had a state trooper walk with her to every class. She was very smart and a very sweet girl. I graduated in 1968 and by then we had more black students. I have tried to remember the civil rights march from Selma to Montgomery but honestly, I don't remember much about it. I think I must have been a teenager and was more interested in "boys" than what was going on in the "real" world.

                  We've come a long way in the south. My newest grandbaby is bi-racial. Her adoption was final on June 1st. She just turned two years old and she is the light of my life. Her name is Katy Belle Johnston. The "Belle" is after my mother --- she is Eula Belle. That's about as southern as you can get. lol

                  I also remember being scared to death of the atomic bomb. We would have to practice getting under our desks at school --- like kids do today for tornado drills. I just knew we were going to die from the "fall out". The bomb was bad but the "fall out" was the thing to be most scared of. I remember being afraid I wouldn't be with my family when the bomb went off and for a while I didn't want to go to school and be separated from my "ma-ma".

                  I have to add that I wish we could turn back the clock when it comes to the morals of "then" and "now". I find myself praying every day for my grandchildren and that they will grow up to be responsible, God-fearing adults. My oldest grandson will be 13 soon. His mom and dad are going to lock him in the closet and not let him out until he's 21. They were advised that this would work best. lol

                  Thanks for starting this thread, Chris. I've had fun reminiscing and I've enjoyed reading what everyone has written. I hope there are others who will add to this thread or if the ones who have already written think of anything else to add ------ jump right back in.

                  Janice
                  Re-started: 2/23/09
                  Starting: 215
                  Current: 207
                  First Goal: 175

                  I love my horses!
                  I love my dogs!

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                  • #10
                    Janice;

                    The Thin Man - their names were Nick and Nora Charles and they had a dog named Asta. I remember that Nick always acted like he didn't like the dog but I think I remember one movie where something happened to it and he showed his true feelings.

                    What kind of sewing machine did your mother use? Mine used a treddle that she bought, before I was born, to make my baby clothes. I still have it. It's a glorified plant stand because Mom was the only one who has ever been able to make it sew properly. It was old when she bought it, made in 1919 I think!

                    Rhonda
                    Female/51
                    Start 10/2/03 286/266/169
                    Re-start 10/25/04
                    Mini Goal 242 by 1/3/05

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I grew up in Dallas, TX, and so have been a city girl all my life. I to remember going out early in the summer and usually not returning until time for supper. However there were times I had to go home for lunch and then back out until supper.
                      Went to lots of little league games to watch my cousins play.
                      Sat. was the day to go to movies. Daddy would give me 50cents and oh, what fun I could have for that 50 cents. It would cost me a quarter to get in the movies and I had 25 cents to spend. The choices I had to make on how to spend that quarter could take up a lot of time, except I didn't want to miss any of the movie so I would think about what I wanted long before I got to the movie theater. I could get a hotdog, soda, popcorn, and candy bar all for that quarter. (hotdog was 10 cents and all of the other things were 5 cents each.) Now if I ate lunch before going to the movie, I could buy a whole lot more because they had penny candy at the movies.

                      I know we had a tv when I was about 7 or 8, black and white of course. However I did listen to lots of the radio chows also. I listened to Fibber McGee and Molly, and always laughed when Fibber McGee opened the closet door. Also listened to Amos & Andy, Green lantern, The shadow, and several others. I know some of the shows were like the reruns on tv because they really were on before my time, but were still played when I was just a kid.
                      On tv along with all of the those other tv shows that have been mentioned, I watched Sky King, Spanky and the Gang, with Darla, Buckwheat, and all of the others. For some reason , I can picture the kid that was always after Darla, but can't remember his name.

                      Cokes were a nickle until Coke came out with the King size coke and that was a dime.
                      Before there was MickeyD's there was Griffs' Burger drive in . I would go there with my Granny and we would get a 15 cent hamburger, 10 cent coke, and 10 cent fries. Imagine the first value meal for 35 cents. LOL

                      When I was really young, I spent a lot of Satuday mornings going with my Granny to the sewing factories where she would pick up work that she did at home. She sewed clothes that were sold in Neiman Marcus, Saks 5th Avenue and other pricey stores. As a matter of fact my Granny was one of the leaders that brought the UAGW to Dallas. Needless to say Granny made many of my clothes. I could see the latest "fad"/"in" clothing and Granny would take a look at it go home and make a pattern for the dress, pants, or whatever and next thing you would know I had whatever the "in" crowd was wearing at the time. My family did not have the money to buy all the latest in fashion, but thanks to my Granny I stayed up with the times for many years.
                      Speaking of spankings, my Daddy would spank me with a belt, and I can not think of one time that I did not deserve the spanking he gave me. However I remember more than anything the times I spent a Sat. morning at my Daddy's work place happily pecking away on a typewriter, or putting some cards in ABC order for him, flying kites in the park, skating, drive-in movies and many other wonderful times we had together.
                      Oh, yes with my Granny, it was a switch. I would have to go get the switch and bring it to her. Granny would then strip off the leaves and I would do a dance as she played a tune up and down my legs.
                      I would not change my childhood for anything.


                      Chris I knew you would be a breath of fresh air for this forum. It is so nice to be right about something for a change. Along with everyone else, I want to thank you for starting this thread.

                      female
                      Start 12/28/02

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                      • #12
                        Oh Betty, I can remember having to pick the switches my mother used too. lol That's funny to think about now. If we didn't "dance", she would hit us a little longer so we always made out like we were dying from the pain. Actually, it wasn't "pain", it was a "stinging" but those switches could leave some major red streaks for sure.

                        Rhonda, my mom had a Singer sewing machine. It wasn't one of the "peddle" ones. It was black but I don't remember the model. My daughter has my grandmother's old peddle model. I'll have to tell her about the plant stand idea. lol

                        I loved all the Shirley Temple movies. She was a great actress at such an early age and such a little doll. I had "ringlets" like she did when I was two and three years old. I had to sit still while ma-ma put the curlers in my hair and I hated it.

                        I loved the Little Rascals too. Those kids were great actors back then. I also remember Sky King and all the black and white westerns that came on every Saturday. Roy Rogers and Gene Autry and The Lone Ranger.
                        How wholesome ------- the good guy in the white hat and the bad guy in the black hat and the good guy won out every time and he always got the girl. He only kissed her one time right when the show was over ------ maybe. Sometimes they never did actually kiss on TV. lol And I remember that Lucy and Ricky had twin beds and could not even sleep together. lol All those I Love Lucy shows were hilarious. I still laugh at them.

                        Great memories for sure. :yes

                        Janice
                        Re-started: 2/23/09
                        Starting: 215
                        Current: 207
                        First Goal: 175

                        I love my horses!
                        I love my dogs!

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                        • #13
                          I guess I am a little older, candy was a nickle. I grew up in Hollywood and I went to school with Annette Funachello, but we didn't like eachother at all. But I still watched Micky Mouse Club, and was in love with one of the boys, Cubby?

                          The first movie I remember going to was to see 7 Brides for 7 Brothers. It cost me a quarter to get in.

                          My bike was a Schwinn and it had gears which I didn't have a clue how to use, and remember my knees were constant scabs cause we had this hill that I slid down on a regular basis.

                          I walked over a mile to school, and do you remember, we had to bring a dime to school to put into our savings account at the bank. We had our oue little savings book. I think I accumulated 5.00 (I know what would happen if I took a dime to a bank now and asked to open a savings account. I know what would happen if I took $5.00)

                          Grandma was the best cook in the world, she was Swedish and I wish I had her recipes. Unfortunately, everything she cooked was white.

                          The first record I bought was Rock Around The Clock.



                          41 pounds down and counting

                          If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else. - Yogi Berra

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                          • #14
                            lgndkpr;
                            On tv along with all of the those other tv shows that have been mentioned, I watched Sky King, Spanky and the Gang, with Darla, Buckwheat, and all of the others. For some reason , I can picture the kid that was always after Darla, but can't remember his name.
                            Alfalfa (sp?) was his name - had the hair that stood up in the crown of his head. Remember the dog - Petey? It hasn't been that long ago that TVLand used to play reruns.

                            What about the Bowery Boys?


                            Janice

                            By plant stand, I mean I just set plants on it. It still works, I just can't make the stitches to come out even. :anger Still has the leather belt that makes it run. Asked an antique dealer about it once, he said that they aren't really worth much, maybe $35. The *kids* now days just trash the sewing machine and use the cabinet as a base for a table. Of course, that was sight unseen. I really would like to get it appraised. I think it is a White.

                            Rhonda
                            Female/51
                            Start 10/2/03 286/266/169
                            Re-start 10/25/04
                            Mini Goal 242 by 1/3/05

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                            • #15
                              Granny beat me to Alfalfa, but, Janice, the show was just Topper, no "Mr." Actually, his first name was Cosmo, but only his wife (whose name I don't remember) called him that. His character was played by Leo G. Carroll. The theme of the show was that they lived with three ghosts that only he could see. They were George and Marion and their St. Bernard, Neil, who was always drinking brandy. (I've no idea who played them, but I can still see them in my mind's eye, so well.) The problem was, people could see the effects of what they did, such as moving, or carrying about, an object, and poor Topper would try to explain it. We thought that show was hilarious, then. The show ran for several years, but I think it went off the air when I was about eight, so I'm amazed that you remember it at all.

                              As to the atomic bomb scare, we used to have "Duck and Cover" drills. If there were an atomic bomb blast, we were supposed to drop down under our desk, kneel down with our heads on the floor, and cover them with our hands. Of course, we know now that that's so ludicrous, it's not even worth commenting on!

                              On the subject of this thread, a good friend, about my age, coincidentally sent me this link. Be sure to check it out.



                              By the way, I have had SO MUCH fun with this thread. Bless you all for participating!

                              Edited to add: Yes, I know I'm compulsive, but I just HAD to do a little research on Topper. The show ran from 1953 to 1956. Topper's wife's name was Henrietta, and she was played by Lee Patrick, who later played Doris Upson in Lucille Ball's filmed version of Mame. The ghost dog drank martinis, not brandy (hey, I was a little kid -- what'd I know?!) and the female ghost, Marion, was played by Anne Jeffreys who, until just last year, was still playing the character of Amanda Barrington on the TV series Port Charles (which I've never seen).
                              -Chris



                              Male, 58 5'4"
                              First time around: 218/147/135 -- 71 pounds lost
                              This time around: 193.5/184.5/135 -- 9 pounds lost

                              Down 33.5 pounds from highest weight

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