TO ALL THE KIDS WHO WERE BORN
IN THE
1930's 40's, 50's, 60's and 70's !!
First, we
survived
being born
to mothers
who smoked
and/or drank
while they
carried us.
They took
aspirin, ate
blue cheese
dressing,
tuna from a
can, and
didn't get
tested for
diabetes.
Then after
that trauma,
our baby
cribs were
covered with
bright
colored
lead-based
paints.
We had no
childproof
lids on
medicine
bottles,
doors or
cabinets and
when we rode
our bikes,
we had no
helmets, not
to mention,
the risks we
took
hitchhiking.
As children,
we would
ride in cars
with no seat
belts or air
bags.
Riding in
the back of
a pick up on
a warm day
was always a
special
treat.
We drank
water from
the garden
hose and NOT
from a
bottle.
We shared
one soft
drink with
four
friends,
from one
bottle and
NO ONE
actually
died from
this.
We ate
cupcakes,
white bread
and real
butter and
drank soda
pop with
sugar in it,
but we
weren't
overweight
because......
WE WERE
ALWAYS
OUTSIDE
PLAYING!!
We would
leave home
in the
morning and
play all
day, as long
as we were
back when
the
streetlights
came on.
No one was
able to
reach us all
day. And we
were O.K.
We would
spend hours
building our
go-carts out
of scraps
and then
ride down
the hill,
only to find
out we
forgot the
brakes.
After
running into
the bushes a
few times,
we learned
to solve the
problem.
We did not
have
Playstations,
Nintendo's,
X-boxes, no
video games
at all, no
99 channels
on cable, no
video tape
movies, no
surround
sound,
no cell
phones, no
personal
computers,
no Internet
or Internet
chat
rooms..........WE
HAD FRIENDS
and we went
outside and
found them!
We fell out
of trees,
got cut,
broke bones
and teeth
and there
were no
lawsuits
from these
accidents.
We ate worms
and mud pies
made from
dirt, and
the worms
did not live
in us
forever.
We were
given BB
guns for our
10th
birthdays,
made up
games with
sticks and
tennis balls
and although
we were told
it would
happen, we
did not put
out very
many eyes.
We rode
bikes or
walked to a
friend's
house and
knocked on
the door or
rang the
bell, or
just yelled
for them!
Little
League had
tryouts and
not everyone
made the
team. Those
who didn't
had to learn
to deal with
disappointment.
Imagine
that!!
The idea of
a parent
bailing us
out if we
broke the
law was
unheard of.
They
actually
sided with
the law!
This
generation
has produced
some of the
best
risk-takers,
problem
solvers and
inventors
ever!
The past 50
years have
been an
explosion of
innovation
and new
ideas.
We had
freedom,
failure,
success and
responsibility,
and we
learned