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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To having been born in the 1970s and see how much the world has changed?

208 replies

Deeperthantheocean · 01/08/2024 23:23

Yes, so a '70s child so have lived through everything beyond the days of MN world, with advice and experiences of parents and grandparents.

I feel so fortunate to have embraced technology. I am in awe of how the world has been revolutionised it as mostly to the greater good of mankind in many ways.

Just from a personal perspective, I feel it's so sad that the school playgrounds we used to go to to play the sports with our friends are all now barricaded, the youth clubs we went to and had a 10p drink and 12p bag of crisps for a night our aged 13, also the innocent early 1980s school discos we did just dance and had fun with our dowdy outfits. My Mum made me a rara skirt from an old skirt to look more modern, amazing talent among so many others.

So, back to my title, oh boy the works has changed so much! My generation knows how much our parents' generation had it hard and those before then so much harder. Poverty was working to be able to work and buy food on rations, that was women also.

Now we do generally have to work as parents but please don't forget our Mums and grandmother's also did, but after looking after children. Unsociable hours, after hours, basically anytime husbands were home to listen out for anything.

OP posts:
HooverTheRoof · 02/08/2024 08:36

"Now we do generally have to work as parents but please don't forget our Mums and grandmother's also did, but after looking after children. Unsociable hours, after hours, basically anytime husbands were home to listen out for anything."

Uhm....that's what I do. I work evenings and weeks ends precisely because of the kids, as do several of my colleagues. Childcare is prohibitively expensive for lots of people. I was born in the 80s if that makes any difference.

RedPony1 · 02/08/2024 08:36

EmeraldRoulette · 01/08/2024 23:41

Discos were 10p I think? They were the cheapest ones 😂

Tangy Toms!

BunnyLake · 02/08/2024 08:36

Some things in the 70s were better some things a lot worse. I have mixed feelings about it but I do know I’ll never look back at the 70s with rose coloured glasses.

The internet is a double edged sword but I’m glad it wasn’t around then.

DancelikeFredAstaire · 02/08/2024 08:39

Haven't RTFT but I was born mid 60's and a packet of Golden Wonder cheese and onion crisps cost 2.5p at the school tuck shop in 1973 (I know this as it was my first day at school in the UK so sticks in my mind), so you lot paying 10p for a packet of discos missed out on the best of times. 😂

treacledan71 · 02/08/2024 08:39

I remember a 10 pence mix up was massive. You could get 2 mojos for half a pence.

mirrorlife · 02/08/2024 08:42

PointsSouth · 02/08/2024 08:33

I can't tell you how many FB groups I've joined - "I Grew Up in the Sixties", "60s London Photos" "70s Music and Fashion" - and then had to leave just because they focussed less on nostalgia and more on grumpy, ungracious and unfounded moaning about 'disrespectful kids today', 'crap modern TV', 'not the London I grew up in' and 'it's all this fucking wokeness, that's what's wrong with society now'.

I mean, since time began a large percentage of old people have been curmudgeonly, selfish whiners, but my generation seem to have turned it in to a lifestyle. Or perhaps - and this'd be ironic - it's that the technology they blame for the price of cod'n'chips has given them a place to bang on about how shit everything is, and it was better before all these boats came over and also strawberries don't taste like they used to.

Quite.

I think people just don’t remember things accurately. I was born mid 70s and the year I turned 13 was the year of the poll tax riots. It wasn’t some sort of pre-lapsarian golden age.

It’s nice to be a kid and not have to think too much about bad things that happen. It’s not any basis for comparing the past with the present though.

insidenumber9 · 02/08/2024 08:45

startstopengine · 01/08/2024 23:39

Be nice! The OP was just having a nice time remembering the simply times, grouchy bunch this evening.

And also a 70s baby here.

agree it was a nicer time, I was more innocent that’s for sure, before the internet.

Threewheeler1 · 02/08/2024 08:46

mathanxiety · 02/08/2024 01:25

Same.

Mum barging into the hall when we were on the phone (only allowed after 6) making throat slitting gestures and tapping her watch dramatically... She still worries about trunk calls before 6pm.

Yep! Calling at off-peak times and only having one phone attached to the wall in the hallway so everyone could hear every word!

FaintWhistle · 02/08/2024 08:46

This is a lovely post.

The 80s and early 90s were a great time to be alive.

I do remember it like you when i was a young kid, OP. Youth clubs etc cheap tuck shop

But then teenage years hit and the rave scene opened up like a mushroom and that was that

I think when i think about being a 70s kid, its the rave scene i think about most

But the times we lived through, the school discos, the massive hairsprayed hair, the raves, the tuckshops, the being out of the house from morning to night - itll never come round again

The things our parents used to do, would be illegal now or at very least get reported to SS

Nowadays the world is terrifying

HeBeaverandSheBeaver · 02/08/2024 08:47

I'm 1971. Had a fab childhood

Easy to get a job in teens

Fairly easy to train and get work as an adult. I could run a small house/flat alone aged 23 with one wage.

There were bad things but I think we had a mix of new tech (no social
Media to ruin our self esteem) Freedom as children and teens that we don't have now.

Also jobs are stupid to find jumping through hoops for what? a coffee shop job. Shit pay. Same with professional jobs. Too much paperwork before even offered an interview

Houses crazy expensive bills expensive

Everyone on the go the whole time. No time to be bored or just hang

Knife Crime out of control
Petty crime doesn't even get tackled.

Porn poisoning the minds

Of our young men
(I'm no prude but to get hardcore porn in the 70 you would have to know where
To go. It's wasn't
Main stream)

Causal sexism was rife in the 70s/80s. I think that's better but deep rooted misogyny seems to be getting worse now. I'm sure that's
Porn.

I could go on.

I don't know if it's better on the whole. Somethings are and some arnt.

Beth216 · 02/08/2024 08:48

EmeraldRoulette · 01/08/2024 23:34

@Deeperthantheocean Not sure what you’re trying to say but I’m really struggling with tech aspects. Even the creators of AI are starting to say they feel they created a monster.

Yes, and yet the government has just announced it's shelving £1.3 billion that was supposed to be spent on tech to try and keep up with all the issues of cyber attacks etc.

So far all labour has done has been shit. Cut pensioners fuel allowance even for those who are living on only the state pension, given doctors large pay rises that the Treasury will only partially fund while not doing anything to sort out the root problems, large pay rises to teachers while again not looking at any of the other aspects that make teaching a misery. TA's and Support staff still working for next to nothing. Windfall taxes on the energy companies will just mean they find ways to charge people more for gas and oil. And Labour have now already started talking about having to make 'difficult decisions' whatever that means.

I loved the 80's and 90's OP it always felt like things were on the up, it felt like there were so many possibilities and buying a house wasn't completely out of reach. It was the best time to grow up IMO.

Fifferfefferfeff · 02/08/2024 08:48

I've lived in the same place since my birth in the 70s and not much has changed (in London) except there was a lot of hope in between, then after "austerity" we went back to the poverty and fear of Thatcher's 80s. The main difference I notice is that individualism seems to be more ingrained in society and things have shifted politically, so that what was considered very right wing is now centre, what was considered centre is now seen as far left. And differences in politics in recent years mean the left and right aren't as clear any more, as single issues and culture wars divide people instead.
Also, the internet. I liked the old days of not being able to look things up without an encyclopedia, good old broadsheets and library books. But I must admit, people who grew up with the internet seem so much more knowledgeable and educated! Also, there's much more awareness of emotional intelligence and mental health nowadays. :)
And things like hot water and central heating are good, rather than those dodgy oil heaters.

AnImaginaryCat · 02/08/2024 08:50

JuneSoon · 01/08/2024 23:43

I know. Don't know why people are being so obnoxious.

Possibly a side effect of talking drugs at 14? 😄

Though seriously, OP it's just nostalgia of a pleasant childhood - which gave you a life without demands and worries. Different from being an adult now (and then) and also very different from the life of a child then who didn't have the good fortune of a pleasant childhood.

Yes, child today don't do the same things as we did but hopefully they are lucky enough to have a childhood which allows them to be wistful and nostalgic as an adult (and feel sorry for the children of their adulthood!)

BrigadierEtienneGerard · 02/08/2024 08:54

I was born in the mid-50s.
My memory of the 70s is it was "the decade style forgot" and politically and work-wise a total shit storm.
Glad they're gone.

notanothernana · 02/08/2024 08:55

I was born late 60s and remember; power cuts, strikes, left outside pubs, smacked in school and at home and runaway inflation (obvs didn't know the terminology but remember my mum crying coz bread had gone up to 25p or summat).

MiseryIn · 02/08/2024 08:55

I was born in the 70s and was getting pissed up in fields at 14. Most of us lost our virginity way before 16. Smoking at about 12 and tried cocaine at 17. Was groomed and used by a 45 year old bloke and his mates at 17.

Yes some aspects were good but honestly I think you were lucky if your youth really was that innocent.

The kids today know a lot more about consent and boundaries. Yes there are issues with social media but at least they are safer.

MermaidMummy06 · 02/08/2024 08:58

Born mid 70's. There's always good & bad. My parents were the generation who never had any idea where we were & parenting was very lax. I had so many bad experiences because I lacked the communication & care from my parents. It was also still very penis oriented - DB had much more opportunity than me & my DF pretty much ignored me.

However, I am glad I missed the social media, pressure to have trendy clothes etc. in my teen years. I was oblivious to it, although 'trendy' was a rara skirt or denim shorts and massive scrunchies.

I did wish I was born later as tech made finding jobs/accommodation elsewhere easier & I would have moved. Plus booking travel & finding off the path things are much easier online.

tuvamoodyson · 02/08/2024 08:58

mirrorlife · 02/08/2024 08:42

Quite.

I think people just don’t remember things accurately. I was born mid 70s and the year I turned 13 was the year of the poll tax riots. It wasn’t some sort of pre-lapsarian golden age.

It’s nice to be a kid and not have to think too much about bad things that happen. It’s not any basis for comparing the past with the present though.

Well, no…but I was having a ball! I wasn’t paying any attention to the poll tax riots etc! I was living my best life in the 70’s/80’s/getting married in the early 90’s! Great days for me…

LynetteScavo · 02/08/2024 08:59

There were good things about the 70s but also bad. Waiting with my mum in endless queues in the Post Office to pay bills, or in the bank to get money out, or in the council offices for god knows what. It was incredibly boring for me but it must have been torture for her.

All that waiting around with no entertainment means children of the '70s know how to wait patiently- I'm not sure children today will know how to wait quietly with nothing to do, as it's not something they often experience. But maybe it's a "skill" they'll never need to have.

SaltyChocolate · 02/08/2024 09:01

This thread just reinforces the point that nothing pleasant happens on social media after 9pm!

Worldgonecrazy · 02/08/2024 09:03

I remember when Cornettos were launched, saving my pocket money for two weeks, and my dad driving me to the newsagents so I could buy one. I can’t remember if it was 20p or 30p. It was around 1975 / 76.

ObelixtheGaul · 02/08/2024 09:04

HooverTheRoof · 02/08/2024 08:36

"Now we do generally have to work as parents but please don't forget our Mums and grandmother's also did, but after looking after children. Unsociable hours, after hours, basically anytime husbands were home to listen out for anything."

Uhm....that's what I do. I work evenings and weeks ends precisely because of the kids, as do several of my colleagues. Childcare is prohibitively expensive for lots of people. I was born in the 80s if that makes any difference.

I was born in the early 70s. My mum was working when I was in Primary school. She didn't have childcare costs because we lived in a small, safe village, nobody cared about young kids walking home alone from school. At 7 I was letting myself in the back door using the key left under a flowerpot. On my own for an hour until sis got home on the bus from secondary school. If I was ill, she had to tell her boss she was ill because it wasn't acceptable to say she had to look after the kids. In the summer holidays she took two weeks off, at the end of which we drove 5 hours up the motorway for two weeks with grandparents, then a week with my father, then a week being vaguely watched by my teenaged sister.
Parenting was a lot more hands off then. At weekends you were out with friends. At primary school age, I was out round friend's houses or up the playing fields with no adults in sight (some of this was thanks to our very rural location. Not many cars, etc). We weren't in after school clubs or breakfast clubs. If our parents went to work before we went to school we got our own breakfast and went to school on our own.

JohnTheRevelator · 02/08/2024 09:05

I was born in 1963,and I can remember that in the early 70s you could buy a can of coke for 7 pence,a Mars bar for 4p,a Marathon (now Snickers) for 3p and a packet of crisps for 5p. Can't say that there was much to enjoy about the 70s though,apart from the music towards the end of the decade (punk,new wave, electronic music). I can recall refuse collectors being on strike and piles of rubbish building up in the streets,power cuts a couple of nights a week,and casual,everyday sexism being the norm.

Acinonyx2 · 02/08/2024 09:10

I was a teenager in the 70s and over the last decade or so I've become very nostalgic for that time - I think this is just something that tends to happen with age (surely the only reason I can look back fondly on 70s fashion). Of course it was a mix - better and worse.

I use the internet all the time for leisure and work -but I worry for dd who is glued to it and spends so much less time out irl. I tried to give her as near that childhood as possible - but it's hard.

I travelled and worked overseas a lot 80s-90s and I really miss that experience of travel before the internet - when information about where you were going was pretty limited and basically just fewer people travelled anywhere. I would queue at the special office for my once a month call home. Sometime the world just feels so incredibly overcrowded and busy.

Mrsjayy · 02/08/2024 09:11

Timeisnevertimeatall · 01/08/2024 23:27

It was 50 years ago, not 100, no need for so much sepia tinged nostalgia!! I'm a 70s baby and you make it sound like the olden days.

Yes this, nostalgic twaddle and the 70s were not that great with our 10p crisps and qwenchy cups. I was flashed at from the dirty old man who lived outside primary school that we were allowed to walk home from ,hit by teachers for talking. I could go on.

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