Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding b? You think our childhoods are similar because there is My Little Pony?
I was left to my owns devices every day from the age of 5. I don’t care that my kid can watch the Flintstones and so did I: our lives are NOTHING alike.
Ummm no that was just an example. Another example: the emphasis on organized sports and extracurriculara in school. I don’t think that was a thing in the 1950s? But definitely a thing in the 1980s
Let me add/. It definitely wasn’t a thing for girls in the 1950s! So my parents being faced with all that for me, a girl, in the 1980s, faced a new type of childhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding b? You think our childhoods are similar because there is My Little Pony?
I was left to my owns devices every day from the age of 5. I don’t care that my kid can watch the Flintstones and so did I: our lives are NOTHING alike.
Ummm no that was just an example. Another example: the emphasis on organized sports and extracurriculara in school. I don’t think that was a thing in the 1950s? But definitely a thing in the 1980s
Let me add/. It definitely wasn’t a thing for girls in the 1950s! So my parents being faced with all that for me, a girl, in the 1980s, faced a new type of childhood.
Not so many serious sports for girls in the 50s, but my mom played half court basketball, was active in the Catholic Youth Organization and parish activities, and did theatre at school. She also did swim, art, and sewing lessons. Weird to think about it now, because her family was super dysfunctional.
Anonymous wrote:In my family, moms have always worked at least parttime, so maybe different from many families in the US where the 1980s was the first time there was a working mom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding b? You think our childhoods are similar because there is My Little Pony?
I was left to my owns devices every day from the age of 5. I don’t care that my kid can watch the Flintstones and so did I: our lives are NOTHING alike.
Ummm no that was just an example. Another example: the emphasis on organized sports and extracurriculara in school. I don’t think that was a thing in the 1950s? But definitely a thing in the 1980s
Let me add/. It definitely wasn’t a thing for girls in the 1950s! So my parents being faced with all that for me, a girl, in the 1980s, faced a new type of childhood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My childhood was more like the 1930s (living on a farm, no tv, homemade clothes, not a lot of stuff). In some ways my kid's life is more like her great-grandparents-living in a working class city neighborhood.
This is a really interesting point. My grandfather grew up in tenements, and I asked him once when I was little ( after a fun touristy trip into the city) of he didn’t miss living in the exciting big city. He said “ and have people on top below next to you all the time? The noise alone would drive me crazy!and the smells!” He was very proud of his suburban house. He’d probably think I was crazy to be voluntarily living in a city apt now (although to be fair, it is far from a tenement).
Anonymous wrote:My childhood was more like the 1930s (living on a farm, no tv, homemade clothes, not a lot of stuff). In some ways my kid's life is more like her great-grandparents-living in a working class city neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding b? You think our childhoods are similar because there is My Little Pony?
I was left to my owns devices every day from the age of 5. I don’t care that my kid can watch the Flintstones and so did I: our lives are NOTHING alike.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding b? You think our childhoods are similar because there is My Little Pony?
I was left to my owns devices every day from the age of 5. I don’t care that my kid can watch the Flintstones and so did I: our lives are NOTHING alike.
Ummm no that was just an example. Another example: the emphasis on organized sports and extracurriculara in school. I don’t think that was a thing in the 1950s? But definitely a thing in the 1980s
Anonymous wrote:Are you kidding b? You think our childhoods are similar because there is My Little Pony?
I was left to my owns devices every day from the age of 5. I don’t care that my kid can watch the Flintstones and so did I: our lives are NOTHING alike.
Anonymous wrote:I think social media makes a much bigger difference than 60s to 80s.