
19 Great Things That Younger Generations May Never Experience
Recently, u/Just_a_Ginger_Fella asked r/AskReddit, "People over 35, what's something you genuinely miss that younger generations will probably never experience?" And we thought we'd share the best responses.
"Toy stores. Nothing beats the aisles and aisles of stuff at Toys 'R' Us."
"Finding a magazine with something you love on it, a band or an actor or whatever. Now if you love something you can immediately consume every piece of media on that thing, which is also cool, but I'll always miss turning the corner at the grocery store and seeing that Spin is doing an all-punk issue, or the Rolling Stone issue after Hunter Thompson died, and being like 'FUCK YES'. And the smell! The ink plus the paper and the perfume samples, incredible."
"Slamming the phone down to end a phone call."
"Life without social media."
"Life without tech in everything – whole summers with just you and the backyard, alternating sometimes with friends and bicycles."
"Internet before the corporate world got hold of it. It was truly a wild west era."
"That feeling of not being watched/recorded."
"The excitement of your new favourite song playing on the radio or MTV."
"When everyone watched a TV show at the same time in their individual households and then came together to talk about it the next day. Pre streaming services days. Commercials still sucked but there was something magical about it."
"The joy of getting off a plane and having someone right there at the gate waiting for you."
"Creating my own ringtone on Nokia composer."
"We didn't have to pay an exorbitant amount of money for concert tickets."
"Living my coyote ugly dream – dancing on bars thinking I'm hot shit but likely being an absolute embarrassment to myself and there being no video evidence of it."
"Being able to be unreachable. It's hard to really get alone time or time to relax when you have a phone on you all the time and you can always be reached."
"Things built to last."
"The arcade. Putting two quarters on the glass indicating you've got next. Watching this one dude beat Mortal Kombat 2 on just two quarters."
"Blockbuster."
"Walking down the street collecting your mates along the way to go hang out."
"Listening to whole albums, not just singles on an app."
H/T to u/Just_a_Ginger_Fella and r/AskReddit for having the discussion!
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Usually, you'll feel as if you're just stuck in the same 500 foot stretch of land that just repeats over and over again forever. Then paranoia sets in. The last thing is that you start to see shadowy figures chasing you on foot. I thought it was stupid when I heard it in the seventh grade until I tried it. I noticed a few shadowy figures out of the corner of my eye looking at me, and at that point, I peeled out and drove to my girlfriend's in downtown Seattle. Would never try it again. I had an intense paranoia I couldn't get rid of and night terrors for days at a time." —u/SoundersAcademy 15."In Wichita, there's a bridge, Theorosa's bridge. There are a few versions of the story, but most of them say there was once a woman who had a child, and she threw the baby off the bridge into the water to be rid of it. Full of grief and regret, she then jumps in after the baby and drowns herself. 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This area was also often very foggy, to the point where you'd find it hard to see far in front of you, meaning if you got lost in the fog, you'd just have to keep walking until you reached the edge. Kids at school would always tell ghost stories about the fields and the fog, and the horrible things that happened to the people who got lost in it. There were stories of people who got turned around and around and died in the cold and stories of terrible monsters in the fog. The whole grassy area was scary enough, and the stories made it scarier. As a consequence, most of us were too scared to go into the grassy area alone, or at night, and stayed away. I found out when I grew up that this area had real abductions in the past. "Real, no shit, abductions of people. Obviously not from a supernatural being, but I find it wild that as kids, we knew nothing about the reality of it. The legends and ghost stories kept us away from a possibly dangerous area. I feel like this is something the adults started to keep kids from being abducted." —u/staycalm_keepwarm 18."I've got one from Arlington, WA. There was a house on a busy stretch of highway, but the road ran through farmland, so the house was still very secluded. Growing up, a lot of different people had lived in this house, but they all left because of hardship that made them unable to afford it or a death in the house. Eventually, the house was left abandoned. Here's the creepy part. During the three years it was unoccupied, the rightmost upstairs light was on every night. Never a car in the driveway or a person in the yard day or night. My friends and I went to explore it one night, and as soon as we got to the door, the light went out. We promptly left. The year I left for college, somebody bought it, so I don't know what became of it." —u/saxmodeman88 19."The wolfanannies (sometimes referred to as heebies) of Winston-Salem, NC, back in the '60s. Basically, some type of animal was draining the blood out of penned-up chickens and rabbits along a road called Ebert. It was all reported in the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinel newspapers. We used to go out to this abandoned rock quarry at night where it was supposed to frequent, but we never saw it, which made me wonder if there was anything to it. Went to the public library in the mid-'70s and looked the stories up on microfiche, and there were probably 20 articles or so with interviews with witnesses, law enforcement, the whole deal. There's nothing on the internet about it, but it was a big deal back in the day." —u/callmestupid 20."I grew up in the city with the famous Lindley Street haunting; the home was located 5-10 minutes away from me. The urban legend was that an innocent family experienced poltergeist activity, in addition to their family cat speaking like a drunken sailor, cursing in a perfectly articulated voice. I saw Lorraine Warren (a paranormal investigator) speak a number of times, and she always said the cat would talk to anyone who was near; it never shut up. There are a few policemen in my town who continue to swear they saw the cat speak. During the '70s and '80s, the urban legend was that if you went to the house, you would easily be able to see poltergeist activity occurring. However, since the house changed hands there have been no reports of activity, and the current owners respond as if they don't know what anyone is talking about when asked about the haunting." —[deleted] 21."I grew up in San Bernardino, CA, and downtown, the major theater that puts on plays and whatnot is the Sturges family playhouse. It was built in the '20's, but it was originally a middle school. A fire burned everything except the theater, which they turned into the Playhouse. There's a legend that the ghost of a kid named Joshua (who died in a football accident when the school was still there) haunts the theater. People have heard voices and seen orbs of light, but the most common thing is to find the pictures in the room at the top of the stairs suddenly hanging askew. My brother and I had firsthand experiences with the ghost." "I was helping my brother clean up after the run of a play he was in, and the director asked us to get a can of paint from the room at the top of the stairs. I, of course, really didn't want to, but my brother and I went anyway. The only people in the building were my brother and I, the director, and her wife, both of whom were at the opposite end of the building putting props into the back of their pickup truck. We get to the top of the stairs, and the door is locked. Now, this is a two-inch-thick solid oak door with knobby brass handles. My brother and I were wondering how to get into the room (because there is only one way in, through that door). The door makes a loud 'WHAM!!!' like someone on the other side got a running start and rammed their shoulder into it. Needless to say, we were scared shitless and got the director, who gets the keys and opens the door. NO ONE IS IN THE ROOM. EVEN CRAZIER, EVERY SINGLE PAINTING ON THE WALL WAS TILTED. There was no way anyone could have been in there, and especially no way anyone could have escaped." —u/archeantus1988 And finally, a reminder to take all urban legends with a tiny (or gigantic) grain of salt: 22."There's a guy who rides his bicycle all over my town. People used to say that he had been arrested a bunch of times for assault and had maybe even murdered someone. I was so afraid of him growing up. As it turns out, he grew up in my town and came back to take care of his sick mother and just sort of lost a couple of screws after she passed. He's an incredibly kind man who does a lot of charity work for the town, but you know how kids talk. I like to think of him as the old man in Home Alone. Just goes to show everyone has a story, and isn't always what they seem." —u/talbottron Have you heard any of these urban legends before? Or have any of your own you'd like to share? Tell me in the comments! Note: Responses have been edited for length/clarity. If you love spooky stories, you'll love the upcoming horror film The Ritual! Based on the true notes and findings of a real-life exorcist and the multiple exorcisms of Emma Schmidt (aka Anna Ecklund), it's sure to horrify you. 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