It was a much simpler life back in 1959, children could be children then which is very important, unlike today when they are forced to become adults a lot sooner. Not worth the trade off of for todays so called benifits (2009 life).
It was a much simpler life back in 1959, children could be children then which is very important, unlike today when they are forced to become adults a lot sooner. Not worth the trade off of for todays so called benifits (2009 life).
T In the mid 50s I went to a school which taught a lot of East Indians, Native Indians and Chinese- we all got along and were all treated equally.
I don’t know where you went to school JLM, but there were very few East Indians around in those days, Most of Canada was lily white.
And speaking of schools, the school prayers and readings from the Bible were mandatory, if one was a Jew, too bad. He would feel isolated and miserable, being the only one to leave classroom during the Christian religious activates. An atheist kid of course wouldn’t dare reveal his atheism.
And I won’t even touch on the prejudice against gay teenagers (if one was unfortunate enough to be exposed as one) or against a pregnant teenager (if one was unfortunate enough that her parents were not able to hush up her pregnancy, either send her away to have her baby or take her to a back street abortionist).
Schools were OK in those days if one conformed strictly to the norm. If a boy or a girl deviates even slightly from the norm, school was a living Hell in those days.
I don’t know where you went to school JLM, but there were very few East Indians around in those days, Most of Canada was lily white.
And speaking of schools, the school prayers and readings from the Bible were mandatory, if one was a Jew, too bad. He would feel isolated and miserable, being the only one to leave classroom during the Christian religious activates. An atheist kid of course wouldn’t dare reveal his atheism.
And I won’t even touch on the prejudice against gay teenagers (if one was unfortunate enough to be exposed as one) or against a pregnant teenager (if one was unfortunate enough that her parents were not able to hush up her pregnancy, either send her away to have her baby or take her to a back street abortionist).
Schools were OK in those days if one conformed strictly to the norm. If a boy or a girl deviates even slightly from the norm, school was a living Hell in those days.
What kind of schools did you go to, teachers hit you, teachers were not allowed to lay a hand on a student in the U.S. back then, were you picked on? I had a great time in school, it was a major time of enjoyment in my life. Still hang around with friends I have from back then. Yes the school was racially integrated and we all were friends and hung out together.
Thank you.AnnaG, you make a very good point.
Manners; that is what made life a bit better back in the fifties and is so sadly lacking in society today. What makes me laugh as I write that is, that there are those among us who will read that and think, 'she's (just) old fashioned.'
What, I ask, is 'old fashioned' about good manners?
Are we any happier today for being able to cuss out each other in public, using language that would make a sailor blush. Is there some vicarious pleasure found in barging to the fore and elbowing others aside in our rush to get a bargain, truly? Since when did frowning rather than smiling at someone we meet our travels, stop being pleasurable?
Yes, 2009 is better in many ways, but in getting here we sacrificed common decency as an accepted norm.
But then, that's just my opinion. ;-)
WRONG, DEAD WRONG, Obviously you know very little about the history of Western Canada, specifically Vancouver Island where there has been a substantial East Indian population for generations.
Lacking gratitude does not mean that we were better off in 1959, JLM. In my opinion, we are much better off today compared to 50 years ago.
Indeed, they had rather strange ideas of what is and isn’t polite in those days. A man may be polite to a lady, but he would be positively rude to somebody he knew to be homosexual (if he did not beat him up in the first instance). A man may open car door for a woman, but if he is a dean of admissions, he would have no problem denying admission to a woman in a supposedly male discipline such as engineering.
A business owner may serve a white man politely, but he may tell a black man rather rudely to get lost, beat it before he picks up a baseball bat. He saw nothing wrong with that.
Now, you may call that politeness, I call that rudeness. They had rater strange sense of morality 50 years ago something I totally cannot relate to.
JLM, for Vancouver Island you may be right, I do remember reading that there is a substantial Sikh population there which has been around for a long time.
But for the rest of Canada, my post stand, most of Canada was lily white 50 years ago. You would find hardly any black kids in most schools in Ontario, for instance.
What kind of schools did you go to, teachers hit you, teachers were not allowed to lay a hand on a student in the U.S. back then, were you picked on? I had a great time in school, it was a major time of enjoyment in my life. Still hang around with friends I have from back then. Yes the school was racially integrated and we all were friends and hung out together.
Yes S.J. things like gratitude did make life a little better. What would make you feel better if you carried someone's groceries up a couple of flights of stairs for them, if they said "Thank you ever so much" and smiled or if they just stood there like a zombie and said nothing? Feelings are part of the enjoyment of life.
"Much more serious are aspects like racial discrimination, sexual discrimination, gay bashing, spousal abuse, child abuse etc."- Yes they are but you would very rarely encounter those things on a daily or even weekly or monthly basis, but you can easily be affected by lack of gratitude half a dozen times a day. Compare it if you like to the "death by a thousand cuts".
We had the strap in the school here until the mid 1970s, but we were lucky the private schools had the cane, we just used to get a few taps on the hand, whereas they had their pants pulled down for a severe thrashing. I remember as a kid delivering newspapers, a fairly elite private boarding school was on my route and one afternoon the Headmaster was on a rampage, some of the boys had been up to a little mischief and they were all bent over the table with their pants pulled down, when I arrived on the scene, they were still standing up to eat their supper. Anyway the strap certainly didn't do us any harm, just made us think twice before getting into mischief. We didn't tell the teacher to F off in those days.
They did away with stuff somewhere around 1955 down here, the telling the teacher to F off started happening around 1970 or so, and has progressively gotten worse. I remember that if I received detention at school for anything, when I got home my Father punished me again. Today the parents get lawyers to defend their kids inappropriate actions and most always against the school. Responsibility seems to be a lost art today.
I can remember in the 1970s, being punched in the chest by a teacher, simply because I 'marched' (army style) across the classroom when we were leaving to go to gym.
The nostalgia is overwhelming. Oh, to go back to the days when teachers could be abusive for no reason, and everyone had to go along with petty dictators.