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Yahoo
4 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Older Adults Are Sharing The Normal But Wild Everyday Experiences From "Back In The Day"
Recently, we asked older adults of the BuzzFeed Community to share the common, everyday experiences and routines from the '50s, '60s, '70s, and '80s that would have young folks now completely confused. And as an older Gen Z'er, I can't even fathom half of it. Here are some of the normal but unique happenings from "back in the day" that, depending on your age, will either have you feeling incredibly nostalgic or super perplexed: 1."We had a wooden milk box on the front porch in the '50s and '60s. The milkman left the milk in the early morning, and we had to get it out and into the fridge ASAP, especially in the summer! And in the winter, we had to get the milk before it froze." —psychicdolphin96 2."In the late '50s and early '60s, there was a man who drove through the neighborhood monthly to sharpen knives and scissors. My mom would gather together all the items she needed sharpened and meet him at the curb in the morning. He'd return everything later in the day to give all the sharpened knives back to my mom!" —bjhk 3."Unless it was raining, we played OUTSIDE every day." —crunchyorc22 4."I worked as a patient transporter to and from the OR in a hospital in 1979. There were two lounges: one for the surgeons and one for the nurses and techs. Both of them were so thick with cigarette smoke that it was hard to see across the rooms. Don't forget about the teacher smoking lounge in schools!" —trendyduck903 5."We always had a family shoe-shining kit at home since we had to keep our shoes shiny for school." —oldgem914 6."Students got report cards, which were actual pieces of paper with grades on them that parents had to sign and return. In my hometown, once you got your last report card that showed you were promoted to the next grade, you could take it to the downtown drugstore, get it stamped, and get a free ice cream cone from the soda fountain. Good times!" —Anonymous 7."The naughty children were paddled by the principal. The paddle was huge and had holes in it to really hurt them. If we were chewing gum, we were also punished by having to stick the gum on our nose, then standing in the corner of the room for the remainder of the class." —witchyshark4826 8."We had to get up and go to the TV every time we wanted to change the channel or adjust the volume. Our first TV remote wasn't until the early '70s. I was so happy to not be the designated channel changer!" —crispycaptain967 9."I graduated from a small Wyoming high school in 1974. Nearly every high school boy drove an older pickup truck with a rifle in a visible gun rack (possibly loaded, too, but if not, ammunition was readily available). Also, no student vehicle in the parking lot was locked, and many people left the keys in the ignition. In spite of all of this, there weren't any incidences of gun violence or school shootings at my school." —wittygoose18183 10."Hospital nurseries had a big glass window where people in the hall could see all of the babies. Each crib had an index card with the baby's info." —floatingwizard242 11."Back in the day, there were no baby carriers or car seats. We'd hold the baby in our arms without having seatbelts on ourselves. My family was lucky enough to get a car bed for my twin sisters. It looked like a bassinet without a base, with no way to secure it in the car. My older brother held it on the bench seat." —floatingwizard242 12."In the 1940s and early 1950s, ice cream was only sold in pint containers. It had to be consumed before it melted since refrigerators, still called ice boxes, were tiny and couldn't keep ice cream frozen. Someone would run over to the corner store for the ice cream, then it would be sliced to accommodate the number of people being served. The flavors were vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, or Neapolitan." —Anonymous 13."Many of our mothers didn't have a driver's license, so things like dry cleaning were delivered to the house. Also, the ice cream truck would bring a horse around, and if we racked up enough points, we could trade the points in to ride the horse. I always looked forward to that!" —minisquid436 14."I was amazed that my daughter didn't know how to do a handstand. In the '60s and '70s, everyone had to do gymnastics in school — including the beam, pommel horse, and the rings. Everyone could do cartwheels, backbends, and walkovers. I guess they wanted to train us all for the Olympics!" —Anonymous 15."To call my girlfriend, who was only two houses away, I only had to dial four numbers. Those were simpler times." —Anonymous 16."We didn't have cell phones. If you were out, you had to have a dime and find a phone booth to make a call. If your car stalled and you were on the freeway, you had to walk to a help phone on the side of the road. This was in the '50s and '60s." —sweetscissors1247 17."When you bought a ticket at a movie theater, it was general admission. There were no computers back then to print a movie title or theater number on a ticket, so you only received a stub. Most theaters only had one or two screens, so you could stay and watch a movie a second time, or go to the other room and watch that movie. We did this on very hot summer days. Sometimes, we'd be there for six hours! You just needed to remember to bring enough money to buy snacks." —Anonymous 18."We played in the sprinklers during the summer; it was a blast. We drank from the hose, and absolutely no one wore bicycle helmets. They just weren't a thing. There were no seatbelts or car seats, and if the cops busted a party, they'd just send everyone home. Birth control was also widely available." —truthmatters "I grew up in the '80s, and I remember barely drinking any water. Kids today seem to always have a container of water with them and are likely much more hydrated, because when I was in elementary school, we had to wait until we were out of class and at a water fountain to drink. And if there was a line of other kids waiting by the fountain, they'd all count from, like, five seconds, and make the next person in line go. In high school, it wasn't much better. Even at football practice, we were rarely given water breaks. I guess it wasn't a priority to make sure everyone was properly hydrated. I just remember being thirsty a lot, I guess?" —metallictrash637 Did you guys really cut ice cream into slices like cake?! Wild. If you're an older adult, what was a common, everyday aspect from back in the day that would have young folks today extremely confused or taken aback? Let us know in the comments, or you can anonymously submit your story using the form below! Note: Some submissions have been edited for length and/or clarity. Solve the daily Crossword

Wall Street Journal
37 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
A Disabled Veteran Was Getting Publishers Clearing House Prize Money. Then the Company Went Bust.
This February, Tamar and Matthew Veatch were expecting their annual six-figure Publishers Clearing House 'forever' prize payment to arrive, as it had for the past four years. It never came. The couple, both disabled Army veterans from Cottage Grove, Ore., reached out to the sweepstakes operator and were told that the payment, just under $200,000 after tax, for Tamar's annuity prize would resume in July, on a quarterly schedule. Then, in April, PCH filed for bankruptcy, listing 10 prize winners among its largest unsecured creditors, court records show. Eight of those were owed more than $2 million each, though their names were redacted for privacy. And the promised July payment to Tamar failed to arrive.


CBS News
37 minutes ago
- CBS News
California peach harvests are down after warmer winter disrupted trees' sleep cycles
The peaches harvested at Masumoto Family Farm in California's Central Valley are so delicious, they are sought after by world-famous restaurants. But this year's harvest signals trouble: there are 30% fewer peaches to pick due to warmer winters that disrupted the sleep cycles of the trees. Farmers like Mas Masumoto, whose family relies on a 12-week peach harvest for their entire income, are seeing firsthand how climate change threatens their livelihood. "We like to think about it like the trees need to sleep really soundly — and they need a certain number of hours under 45 degrees," Mas' daughter Nikiko said. This past winter, the area's stone fruits, such as peaches, plums, apricots and cherries, didn't get consistent cold weather that regulates the trees' nutrients. Instead, they were interrupted by many warmer days, which could explain why growers have been hit hard. "Some of them actually didn't have a crop at all," said Raymond Mireles, an agriculture advisor with the University of California. "And so ultimately, you know, as these trees get woken up, these trees weren't able to kind of maintain some of their carbohydrates within the roots, and ultimately they don't know when to wake up." Much like a person needs a full night's sleep to be productive, the trees need a full winter's sleep. Now, stone fruit lovers across the country may be beginning to feel the impact. Consumers are paying 23 cents more a pound for yellow peaches and 17 cents more for white peaches. The Masumotos say one of their oldest groves at the farm helped save the day. Mas Masumoto remembers helping plant it with his parents 60 years ago after they were released from a Japanese internment camp. They also passed down old methods of irrigation. "We still use this old system of furrow irrigating, most modern agriculture is using drip irrigation, which only keeps the one plant alive," Masumoto said. "My theory, our theory, is the idea of keeping the soil alive. And I think as our trees have deep roots, they tolerate these swings in temperature and change in climate." The older trees — and old ways — are helping this one family pack and ship 10,000 pieces of fruit a day. But other farmers and lovers of fresh California fruits may not be so lucky in the future.