50 Years Ago
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Dedicated
Too Life History
Project
This little poem tells it
pretty much like it was ........
Here's how it was in the good
old days
50 Years Ago
A little house with two bedrooms
and one car on the street,
A mower that you had to push, to make
the grass look neat.
In the kitchen on the wall, we only had one
phone,
And no need for recording things - someone was always
home.
We only had a living room, where we would
congregate,
Unless it was at meal time, in the kitchen where we
ate.
We had no need for family rooms or extra rooms to dine,
When
meeting as a family, those two rooms would work out fine.
We
only had one TV set and channels - maybe two,
But always there was
one of them, with something worth the view.
For snacks we had
potato chips, that tasted like a chip,
And if you wanted flavor,
you made Lipton's onion dip.
Store bought snacks were rare,
because my mother liked to cook,
And nothing can compare to snacks
in Betty Crocker's(r) book.
The snacks were even healthy - with
the best ingredients,
There was no label, with a hundred things
that made no sense.
Weekends were for family trips, or staying
home to play,
We all did things together, even go to church to
pray.
When we did our weekend trips, depending on the weather,
No
one stayed at home because, we liked to be together.
Sometimes
we would separate, to do things on our own,
But we knew where the
others were, without our own cell phone.
Then there was the
movies, with your favorite movie star,
And nothing can compare to
watching, movies in your car.
Then there were the picnics, at
the peak of summer season,
Pack a lunch and find some trees - and
never need a reason.
Get a baseball game together, with the
friends you know,
Have real action playing ball - and no game
video.
Remember when the doctor used to be the family
friend,
And didn't need insurance - or a lawyer to defend
The
way that he took care of you, or what he had to do,
Because he
took an oath, and strived to do the best for you.
Remember
when the country, was united under God,
And prayer in schools and
public places, was not deemed as odd.
Remember when the church was
used for, worshipping The Lord,
And not used for commercial use,
or for some business board.
Remember going to the store - and
shopping casually,
And when you went to pay for it, you used your
own money?
Nothing that you had to swipe or - punch in some
amount,
Remember when the cashier person, had to really
count?
Remember when we breathed the air, it smelled so fresh
and clean,
And chemicals were not used on the grass, to keep it
green.
The milkman and the bread man used to go from door to
door,
And it was just a few cents more, than going to the
store.
There was a time when mailed letters, came right to
your door,
Without a lot of junk mail ads, sent out by every
store.
The mailman knew each house, by name and knew where it was
sent,
There was not loads of mail addressed to: "Present
Occupant".
Remember when the words "I do"
meant, that you really did?
And not just temporally, till someone
blows their lid.
There was nothing as "no one's fault;"
we just made a mistake,
There was a time when married life, was
built on give and take.
There was a time when just one glance,
was all that it would take,
And you would know the kind of car,
the model and the make.
They didn't look like turtles, trying to
squeeze every mile,
They were streamlined, white walls and fins -
and really had some style.
One time the music that you played,
whenever you would jive,
Was from a vinyl, big holed record called
a forty-five.
The record player had a post, to keep them all in
line,
And then the records would drop down, and play one at a
time.
O sure we had our problems then - just like we do
today,
And always we were striving - trying for a better way.
And
every year that passed us by, brought new and greater things,
We
now can even program phones, with music or with rings.
Oh the
simple life we lived, still seems like so much fun,
How can you
explain a game - just kick the can and run.
And why would boys put
baseball cards, between bicycle spokes?
And for a nickel, red
machines had little bottled cokes.
This life seemed so much
easier - and slower in some ways,
I love the new technology but I
sure miss those days.
So time moves on and so do we - and nothing
stays the same,
But I sure love to reminisce, and walk down memory
lane.
--anonymous