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guest100718
Guest
I am one of 4 (not Borg) and have 3 kids of my own, they have the same freedom to go out and about as I did as child. I don't think we had it any better, just different.
Society has deemed it impossible to give the freedom to kids that we had. Too many nutters and weirdo's about now. (not that there weren't any in the past!)
I played in the street when I was a kid, and got run over by a milk float. Bloody horse kicked me as well.:angry:We were able to play in the street back then because there weren't many cars, but we had to walk to school because there weren't many cars
And what you haven't had, you haven't missed.
This thread was actually inspired by discovering the The Lady And The Tramp was made in 1955years before I was born.
I played in the street when I was a kid, and got run over by a milk float. Bloody horse kicked me as well.:angry:
The one thing I don't envy kids of today is trying to find a job. In my day, you just walked in somewhere, asked if they had any jobs and you'd start the following day! No interviews, no CV. You'd just get on with it. If you didn't like it after a week or two, you'd just leave and find another one.
From what I see (and bear in mind that I am not a parent) kids are just not allowed to be kids anymore. TV, Music and media are all pushing them into growing up way before their time and they just do not get to enjoy a childhood. My mate's daughter is 12 and yet she acts and behaves in the same way that 15 or 16 year olds behaved when I was a kid.
The fact is that there is nowhere to hide kids from all of this now. With TVs in every room and internet access everywhere they are bombarded with an image that they feel that they have to achieve rather than be themselves. At the age of 12, the most desireable piece of clothing was a pair of Dunlop Green Flash, now kids have to have the right trainers, designer outfits the lot of they want to feel part of the group.
Give me growing up in the 70s any day of the week.
From what I see (and bear in mind that I am not a parent) kids are just not allowed to be kids anymore. TV, Music and media are all pushing them into growing up way before their time and they just do not get to enjoy a childhood. My mate's daughter is 12 and yet she acts and behaves in the same way that 15 or 16 year olds behaved when I was a kid.
The fact is that there is nowhere to hide kids from all of this now. With TVs in every room and internet access everywhere they are bombarded with an image that they feel that they have to achieve rather than be themselves. At the age of 12, the most desireable piece of clothing was a pair of Dunlop Green Flash, now kids have to have the right trainers, designer outfits the lot of they want to feel part of the group.
Give me growing up in the 70s any day of the week.
I never had a paper round, but my oldest brother was a milkman, and I can remember getting up at silly o'clock to go out and help him on his deliveries at week-ends to earn myself a bob or two. Used to help our local milkman as well. If I wanted extra money I'd go scrumping cooking apples, nick my mums scales and wander around the council estate we lived on, selling them for 3d a pound! If I wasn't scrumping apples, I'd be out picking blackberries, bluebells or primroses and doing the same.
Used to disappear for hours on end, be gone all day, and my old Mum wouldn't worry. We made our own fun, either playing football all day, walk for hours and hours to find the best chestnut trees and gorge ourselves silly on them.
The one thing I don't envy kids of today is trying to find a job. In my day, you just walked in somewhere, asked if they had any jobs and you'd start the following day! No interviews, no CV. You'd just get on with it. If you didn't like it after a week or two, you'd just leave and find another one.
Scrumping- one of my hobbies back then!
This. We also didn't have the peer pressure and easy availability of drugs to worry about; if we had a fall out with someone you might get a black eye or a split lip as it was settled with fists, not guns or knives as it is today. We didn't have computer games so went out and met other people, learnt to understand them and different points of view and were generally more tolerant.
I don't envy kids today one bit.
Not 100% sure they all settle arguments with guns and knives. Or even 0.01% of kids arguments are settled with guns and knives to be honest.
And as for being more tolerant then looking at society today then I'm not sure the 'elder generation can give the younger generation any lessons on tolerance. As a lot of young people have grown up in a multicultural society, accept it and are less fearful of those nasty immigrants than people a lot more senior then them.