Life in a Different Era

Today’s my birthday and thought I’d share some memories of my childhood. It does seem like a lifetime ago and definitely a different era.

Growing up, I was in the generation of kids that would come home from school and go outside and play all the rest of the day until around dinner time. And on weekends, all day playing with my friends mostly outside until dark.

There was a freedom then that is sadly missing in my youngest son’s generation and the generation of young ones after his today.

I would hop on my bike and ride all over the place around my neighborhood and sometimes to my friends’ neighborhoods that were a ways off from my own.

Riding on a bike was always such a freeing feeling. The wind streaming through your hair, brushing your face. A calming feeling as well. When you’d peddle fast, you felt like nobody could touch you, nobody could reach you, that you were almost invincible.

I had the popular banana seat bike with the looped handlebars. I had a blue one. 🙂

(example of banana seat bike via public domain pics on Google)

Lots of games to play outside, too, like hide and go seek, tag, ghost in the graveyard, and bloody murder. The last one I played with a whole stairwell of kids (two apartment buildings connected on Rhein Main Air Base in Germany).

Whenever I’d say to whoever I was talking to that we played bloody murder, the person wouldn’t know what that was. It’s basically the opposite of hide and go seek. The murderer hides and the people go around a particular large object. The murderer will wait until he/she has the best shot at tagging one of his/her victims by surprising them quietly. The person who sees the murderer coming for him/her yells, “Bloody murder!” and everyone screams and runs around the large object to base, which is the safe spot for everyone. Also, you can’t turn around and go back to base. You must continue running around the same direction and get to the base that way. It was a fun game. 🙂

I grew up playing with Fisher Price Little People and Barbies.

But at a certain point, our mom made us (my sister and I) choose which sets of toys we wanted to keep because we just had too many. lol So we chose Barbies.

We had so many awesome Barbies, and ones that were famous celebrities, too!

*Dolly Parton

*Jamie Somers (Bionic Woman)

*Cheryl Ladd (Charlie’s Angels)

*Kate Jackson (Charlie’s Angels)

*Steve Austin (the Six Million Dollar Man)

*Cher

*The Archies (from the comics) characters

My sister and I made up such elaborate stories with our Barbies’ lives. lol Surviving a Tornado, a murderer on the loose, a dying relative (or the main Barbie dying of an illness), big families with lots of kids.

I was around for the introduction of the Atari system.

We owned:

Centipede, Demon Attack, Frogger, Pitfall, Kaboom!, Keystone Cops, Enduro, Maze Craze, and Asteroids. And probably others I’ve forgotten to mention here.

My first video game was a miniature video arcade game that was small enough to set on your lap and play in the car (like I did) or in your room, or whatever. It was portable. The game was, of course, Pac-Man. Ha ha!

I was also around for the introduction of the Rubik’s Cube. That was so much fun trying to figure out then. I don’t recall ever really solving it, but maybe I did. Just don’t remember!

Times were simpler then. When your family would go on road trips, your sibling and you would sit in the back seat playing card games like Crazy Eights, or Barbies, or look outside the window at the trees going by, or follow the telephone lines as they undulated soothingly up and down.

In my grade school years, while in the car, my parents would be playing their eight tracks of Johnny Cash, Dolly Parton, and others. Later, at home we’d listen to the music on the stereo Mom would play from her favorites, the BeeGees and ABBA.

We had a pet Gerbil named Lucy when I was in grade school. My dad used to sing the Beatles song, “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” to her. Hee hee. It was fun.

Board games were big in my house. Sorry, Life, Clue, were the main ones.

In late grade school, junior high, and high school, my family would play poker, rummy, Tripoli, and Trivial Pursuit. My dad won every time in Trivial Pursuit. lol

Going to the roller rink in sixth grade was a big deal. It was so much fun skating around the rink on those four cushy, fat wheels. The best part of the evening on the rink was when they’d shut off the regular lights and leave on the colored lights that would flicker around the floor. Then they’d play “The Hokey Pokey” with those flashing lights, and we’d do the dance.

As I was typing here, I must tell you what happened this evening.

My oldest son, Nicholas, and his best friend Alex, took me to Olive Garden for dinner. It was delicious. And I even splurged and had a slice of cheesecake! They treated me, and I thanked them!

Then we came home, and I was on my computer starting this blog, when my youngest son, Christopher, came home early from filling in for a coworker at his job. See, he wasn’t supposed to work today, but a coworker was asking him if he could fill his shift. So, Christopher, always so good at being dependable and helpful, went ahead and took the 4:30 p.m.-11:00 p.m. shift.

However, he came home around 8:00 or so. He came up to my room and dropped his backpack and looked sad. I was worried something had happened at work. He came over to me and gave me a hug. He broke down in tears and said he felt terrible working on my birthday. He cried at work, and they let him off early, at 7:30. I told him it was fine. It’s all right.

I was so touched.

He said in tears, “I didn’t even get to give you a hug goodbye before I went to work.”

I told him I understood.

Well, he said, “And I got you a present.”

Again, I was moved by this.

He went into the hallway outside of my room and brought in a comfy little solid and soft back rest to put against the head board of my bed. And I love it!

I told him it was so kind and thoughtful of him. I’d never forget this special gift. It was so practical and thoughtful! He knows I tend to sit here at times and type. And here he went to Target after work and bought this for me! What a sweetheart! I hugged him and told him I loved him and thanked him for his kind and thoughtful gift, once again.

I had him take a picture of me using it so I could share it with you all. 🙂

A very special birthday today. I feel completely loved and blessed. Thank you, God for my family and my life!

Most Popular Christmas Gifts Over the Past 70 Years

retro toys

Do you remember what you desperately wanted for Christmas when you were a child? Were they toys that were the “In” thing?

For fun, I put together some data on popular toys kids wanted for Christmas through the decades.

Let’s start with the 1950s.

Children then seemed eager for such toys as that ol’ rubber guy, Gumby, the bouncy Pogo Stick, and the timeless Play-Doh. And what kid could go without the corn popper? I think many didn’t!

Gumby            pogo stick

corn popper toy

I actually had all of those, except Gumby, but I had them later on in my childhood era. 🙂

 

1960s

Little girls were gaga over the Chatty Cathy doll and the amazing Easy-Bake Oven.

chatty cathy doll     easy bake oven toy

While boys found an interest in GI Joe action figures and Hot Wheels. Well…I would say both sexes were interested in these and other toys throughout these eras.

GI Joe toy        hot wheels 1968

 

1970s

In this decade, kids were fascinated with the first foam Nerf ball, and the flexibility and durability of Stretch Armstrong. I remember the latter very well. A few of my friends had this elasticized dude, and it was wildly fun pulling him yards apart and watching him slide back into a normal-sized guy once we tired of torturing him. Haha.

nerf ball        stretch armstrong

And the cool Evil Knievel Stunt Cycle was all the roar in the early 1970s.

Evil Knievel stunt cycle

Also, a huge invention: the Atari video game system came out in this decade. The first game, I remember, was Pong. Haha. But later on, we enjoyed Pac-Man, Space Invaders, Astroids, Centipede, Pit Fall, and others!

The View Master was big then too. I had several slides from the Scooby-Doo show when I was a kid. Christmas was complete when kids got these fun toys in the 1970s.

view master

 

1980s

How could anyone around that time forget about the fights on Black Fridays over the Cabbage Patch Kids? Goodness. The scrambling across the slippery toy stores, and the unbelievable tug-o-war over the last couple of dolls was both astonishing and insane. Those certainly were a HUGE want for lots of children in the 1980s.

cabbage patch kids 1

Then, for the more nerdy kids, the Rubik’s Cube came out and teased and worked kids’ brains in a good way. I mean, who didn’t have a Rubik’s Cube then? We were all cool nerds! What fun that was!

KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA

This was also the decade when the Nintendo video game system came out! My sons are loyal Nintendo fans.

 

1990s

Goodness. Do you remember all the hubbub over the Tickle Me Elmo doll? I do. Although I was in my twenties then, I still remember the craze over his giggling. And then there was the bizarre-looking Furby dolls. Many parents scrambled for these dolls during Christmastime.

tickle me elmo        Furby doll

And don’t forget the Beanie Babies! Believe it or not, they started off in McDonalds’ Happy Meals but caught on like wildfire, becoming one of the most wanted and collected items in the decade.

beanie babies

 

2000s

Looks like Zhu Zhu Pets came out in this time period, as well as those ugly…er, I mean, nice dolls, the Bratz. My sons actually each had a Zhu Zhu Pet. They were hamsters. The Razor Scooter was a biggie in the early 2000s.

zhu zhu pets               razor scooter

 

My Christmas toy memories

Some of the most awesome toys I got for Christmas in the late 1970s and 1980s were the Barbie Dream House and several of the Muppets characters. They were puppets where you stuck your hand in and could move their mouths, but in the case of the character, Animal, I could move his eyebrows too. What fun those were!

barbie dream house    Muppets

 

What were special gifts you loved when you were growing up?

 

~*~*~*~

 

 

 

Big Wheels in a Bountiful Era

big wheel from the 1970s love

Growing up in the 1970s was a fun time.  Aside from my daily attempts in creating various flying apparatuses, I had this amazing machine that took me everywhere with the pumping of its pedals.  It only had an emergency brake, but it was employed when it was absolutely necessary, which was never.  Its colors were a daring yellow, patriotic blue, and powerful red.  The machine had an adjustable seat, and for decoration, streamers sprouted from its handles.

This powerful, glorious machine was called a Big Wheel because the front and back wheels were…well…BIG.  They ran over anything in their path, flattening these things as thin as tracing paper.

Many mornings if I wasn’t scraping my metal-wheeled roller skates (I got the rubber wheels later) across the asphalt at six a.m. (you know the neighbors loved that), I’d hop on my power vehicle and pedal down the side walk (or pavement, depending on where we were living at the time), ready to ride the day away.

If anyone tried to harass me by chasing after me via foot or bike, I’d take off on my trusty Big Wheel, squealing out of the vicinity, sparks snapping off my back monster wheels, a dusty cloud floating in my wake.  Blind from the dust and stunned by the super sonic speed of my Big Wheel, my bullies were left to wallow in defeat.

Years later when I no longer could fully fit in the seat of my beloved machine, I’d clasp its worn handles, place one sneaker on its seat, and push with the other, transforming it into a type of stylish and speedy scooter.  Alas, eventually, my trusty transport had to retire and live with its buddies in the hallowed halls of Big Wheel Memories…memories that stay with me forever.

~*~*~*~