Probably no fridge. Almost certainly no deepfreeze. No tampons, just really bulky pads that you discreetly burnt on the living room fire (because there was no central heating). Making toast under the grill because you didn't have a toaster. Or a microwave.
Yogurt was exotic, take-away food was confined to fish and chips and a a chinese restaurant if you were lucky. No pizza, pasta was not normal - most often seen as macaroni in stews. Rice was quite exotic too.
No disposable nappies, so you spent a lot of time washing nappies, and hanging them out on the line because you didn't have a tumble dryer.
TV was great - there was BBC and ITV, both in black and white. Both had long periods of blankness in the middle of the day, and they went off at about 11pm.
This was pre-several childhood vaccinations, so as well as chicken-pox, you probably had whooping cough, mumps and measles to go through. Fortunately the polio vaccination had just come in, and TB, so you escaped both of those.
But yes, it was OK as a child. Rubbish for a young mother - many were no longer living near their families because direction of labour during the war had taken them far away, and that's where they met their husbands. So they were stuck at home (it was still expected that you resigned, if not when you married, then certainly when you had your first child) with few child care options, no mother and toddler groups, and school only once the child had reached its 5th birthday.