THE SURVIVORS ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ We were born before television, before penicillin, polio shots, frozen foods, Xerox, contact lenses, videos, Frisbees and "the pill". We were before radar, credit cards, laser beams and ballpoint pens; before dish-washers, tumble-dryers, electric blankets, air conditioners, drip dry clothes - and before man walked on the Moon.   We got married first and THEN lived together (how quaint can you be?). Divorce was something that happened to Film Stars. We were certainly not before the differnce between the sexes were discovered; but were were before sex changes. We made do with what we had, and we were the last generation to think you needed a husband to have a baby. For us time sharing meant togetherness, not Spanish holiday homes.   We were before day-care centres, group homes and disposable nappies. We had never heard FM radio or cassettes; or knew of artificial hearts, word processors, yoghurt, or men wearing ear-rings. We typed letters with manual typewriters, did computations by hand, and used carbon paper to make copies. We used telephones without buttons and 'fax' was something you looked up in an encyclopaedia. We did business with handshakes and trust and somehow it all worked.   We thought fast food was what you ate at Lent, a Big Mac was an oversize raincoat, and crumpet we had with tea. We existed before house-husbands, gay rights, computer dating and dual careers, and when 'a meaningful relationship' meant getting along well with your cousins, and sheltered accommodation was where you waited for a bus.   Before 1940, "Made in Japan" meant junk, the term "making out" referred to how you did your exams, a "stud" was something that fastened a collar to a shirt, and "going all the way" meant staying on a double-decker to the 'bus depot. Pizzas, McDonalds, and instant coffee were unheard of. In our day cigarette smoking was fashionable, "grass" was mown, "coke" was kept in the coal-hole, a "joint" was a piece of meat you had for Sunday dinner, "pot" was something you cooked in, and cold turkey was what you had on Boxing Day.   Rock music was a lullaby, Eldorado was ice cream and a gay person was the life and soul of the party and nothing more, whilst AIDS were for those with hearing difficulties. We played with Dinky toys, wore liberty-bodices, took daily doses of cod liver oil, drank Ovaltine, ate porridge, and listened to Dick Barton, the Goon Show, Workers' Playtime and Housewives Choice. A chip was a piece of wood or fried potato, hardware meant nuts and bolts and 'software' wasn't a word. In our time closets were for clothes, not for "coming out of", bunnies were small rabbits and dishes were for washing, not for receiving programmes from "out-of-space".   We were born when everything in Woolworths cost a penny, and for sixpence you could take a tram ride, go to the cinema and buy an ice cream.   We who were born before 1940 must be a hardy bunch when you think of the ways in which the world has changed and the adjustments we have had to make. No wonder we get confused and that today there is a generation gap. BUT ... by the grace of God ... we have survived!  

How old are you BILL

 

 


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