Growing up in a small town.

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Lancer_Fan
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Growing up in a small town.

Post by Lancer_Fan »

Those who grew up in small towns will laugh when they read this.

Those who didn't will be in disbelief and won't understand how true it is.

1) You can name everyone you graduated with.

2) You know what 4-H means.

3) You went to parties at a pasture, barn, gravel pit, or in the middle of a dirt road. On Monday you could always tell who was at the party because of the scratches on their legs from running through the woods when the party was busted. (See #6.)

4) You used to'drag'Main .

5) You whispered the 'F' word and your parents knew within the hour.

6) You scheduled parties around the schedules of different police officers, because you new which ones would bust you and which ones wouldn't.

7) You could never buy cigarettes because all the store clerks knew how old you were (and if you were old enough, they'd tell your parents anyhow.) Besides, where would you get the money?

8) When you did find somebody old enough and brave enough to buy cigarettes, you still had to go out into the country and drive on back roads to smoke them.

9) You knew which section of the ditch you would find the beer your buyer dropped off.

10) It was cool to date somebody from the neighboring town.

11) The whole school went to the same party after graduation.

12) You didn't give directions by street names but rather by references. Turn by Nelson's house, go 2 blocks to Anderson's , and it's four houses left of the track field.

13) The golf course had only 9 holes.

14) You couldn't help but date a friend's ex-boyfriend/girlfriend.

15) Your car stayed filthy because of the dirt roads, and you will never own a dark vehicle for this reason.

16) The town next to you was considered 'trashy' or 'snooty,' but was actually just like your town.

17) You referred to anyone with a house newer then 1955 as the 'rich' people.

18) The people in the 'big city' dressed funny, and then you picked up the trend 2 years later.

19) Anyone you wanted could be found at the local gas station or the dairybar.

20) You saw at least one friend a week driving a tractor through town or one of your friends driving a grain truck to school occasionally.

21) The gym teacher suggested you haul hay for the summer to get stronger.

22) Directions were given using THE stop light as a reference.

23) When you decided to walk somewhere for exercise, 5 people would pull over and ask if you wanted a ride.

24) Your teachers called you by your older siblings' names.

25) Your teachers remembered when they taught your parents.

26) You could charge at any local store or write checks without any ID.

27) There was no McDonalds.

28) The closest mall was over an hour away.

29) It was normal to see an old man riding through town on a riding lawn mower.

30) You've pee'd in a cornfield.(I love this one!)

31) Most people went by a nickname.

32) You laughed your butt off reading this because you know it is true, and you forward it to everyone who may have lived in a small town.

I would not have wanted to have been raised any other way, Tough times don't last... Tough people do.


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claypantherfan
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by claypantherfan »

30 is still me


Burg_Grad_77
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Burg_Grad_77 »

Well I was born in a small town
And I live in a small town
Probly die in a small town
Oh, those small communities

All my friends are so small town
My parents live in the same small town
My job is so small town
Provides little opportunity

Educated in a small town
Taught the fear of jesus in a small town
Used to daydream in that small town
Another boring romantic thats me

But Ive seen it all in a small town
Had myself a ball in a small town
Married an l.a. doll and brought her to this small town
Now shes small town just like me

No I cannot forget where it is that I come from
I cannot forget the people who love me
Yeah, I can be myself here in this small town
And people let me be just what I want to be

Got nothing against a big town
Still hayseed enough to say
Look whos in the big town
But my bed is in a small town
Oh, and thats good enough for me

Well I was born in a small town
And I can breathe in a small town
Gonna die in this small town
And thats probly where theyll bury me


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Lancer_Fan
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Lancer_Fan »

Number 27 ...No McDonalds....Does anyone else remember BBF???


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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by BubbleGumTiger »

FIDO (Forget It Drive On) wrote:Pretty good list. :mrgreen:


and you and I have done em all......... :mrgreen:


biggdowgg
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by biggdowgg »

Lancer_Fan wrote:Number 27 ...No McDonalds....Does anyone else remember BBF???



I think that is the one that had the round looking globe,with neon stick lights on a pole??? :oops:


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orange-n-brown 365
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by orange-n-brown 365 »

Lancer_Fan wrote:Number 27 ...No McDonalds....Does anyone else remember BBF???

YES!!! loved it!!! what a treat!!!
and number 15 was me except my car was as dirty inside as out there were so many rusted places :lol: :lol:


Burg_Grad_77
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Burg_Grad_77 »

Yeah, we had a BBF in Portsmouth years ago right where Burger King is now. I never would eat there because of the rumor floating around of someone caught being the "master of his domain" into the tartar sauce that was used on the burgers.

GROSS!!!!!


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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Mouth's Better Half »

I love this list. Especially about the clerks knowing what age you are.
My father grew up on a farm but went to college and became a dentist. He actually rented land for my brothers and I to farm in the summer. For him it was a hobby that he did after work. Even though I can admit now it was fun. It was alot of work. My Mom canned everything she could and froze everything else. My summers when I was 12 through sixteen were spent weeding and harvesting.
My brothers got to do all the fun stuff, drive a tractor , spray for bugs, etc.When we were in the upper grades of high school there was not enough of us to help with sports and all so he quit. My oldest brother still gardens because of this. I have a love of flowers and watching things grow. People that raise their children with these skills are fortunate. Truly.


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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Mouth's Better Half »

I don't know when I was 14 ,and my brothers were 16 and 18 there was alot of dirt clod throwing going on when are parents weren't there. One of the best/worst stories of taking my little sister there was the farmer we rented from grew rabbits. To eat. Now my brothers and I knew this but she didn't. She would feed them clover and name them and periodically one would be "missing" when we would go to work. My brother would tell her the rabbit must have gotten out and ran to freedom. She didn't find out until we were much older where the man's wife's "chicken " and dumplings came from.


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BuckeyeCAV
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by BuckeyeCAV »

FIDO (Forget It Drive On) wrote:It certainly makes the family unit a little tighter/stronger, doesn't it. You learn what team work, cooperation, and carrying your own load is from an early age too.



So true :!:


Mouth's Better Half
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Mouth's Better Half »

Cruel well, we kept it from her for years. It was just life on a farm. My dad told me they weren't allowed to name any of the animals on their farm growing up. But he named the goats.


biggdowgg
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by biggdowgg »

[quote="Mouth's Better Half"]Cruel well, we kept it from her for years. It was just life on a farm. My dad told me they weren't allowed to name any of the animals on their farm growing up. But he named the goats.[/quote]

I thought ALL goats was named BILLY,,,,except for that old goat in flatwoods. 8)


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dazed&confused
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by dazed&confused »

The Dairy Freeze was THE place to eat.
We partied in an old abandoned cemetary until dawn.
We had a "town drunk".
There was a single jail cell at the City Hall.
People dressed up for Decoration Day and crowded the sidewalks to watch the band march through.
Your uncle showed up for the family reunion in a straw hat.
The town cop put a red light and siren on HIS personal car.
Local shop owners hung bunting from their porches on the 4th of July.
Bricks from the local (if defunct) brickyard paved the sidewalks.
Your grandma remembered when there were 22 bars in a town of 5000 people.
Your hometown now has 500 people (including dogs).
Spittoons!
You had a tab with the local grocer.
Your hometown was the birthplace of labor in Ohio.
And I'm only 50.


Mouth's Better Half
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Mouth's Better Half »

We had a milkman that delivered milk and icecream by our back door twice a week.
All kids played outdoors --- all the time.
Your kids were watched and disciplined by every one in the neighborhood.
No one locked their doors. Unless they were leaving town.
Mom hung all the laundry out on a clothesline.


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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by BubbleGumTiger »

Friday evening..........football in the end zone at the Tank while the Tigers played

Saturday morning......basketball on any grade school lot in town or football in the middle of Etna street in Irishtown...


Mouth, let me know when your number one son takes up gardening, something tells me he would be very talented in that line of work............ :mrgreen:


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dazed&confused
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by dazed&confused »

Mouth's Better Half wrote:We had a milkman that delivered milk and icecream by our back door twice a week.
All kids played outdoors --- all the time.
Your kids were watched and disciplined by every one in the neighborhood.
No one locked their doors. Unless they were leaving town.
Mom hung all the laundry out on a clothesline.

My grandma had a clothesline "prop" to hold the middle of the line off the ground when she hung out the bedspreads to dry. It was an old limb with a little fork at the top. Of course, she washed clothes and wrung them out through her old Maytag washer/ringer she had since the depression. "Warsh day" was Tuesday for her. I'd love to be back there again.


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Der_Kommissar1968
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Der_Kommissar1968 »

With no adult supervision, you and your friends could ride your bikes anywhere, out to Ice Creek or down to Sta-Tan pool without the fear of being abducted by some creep, pedophile or derelict. Well, okay, we had derelicts back then, but they weren't abducting anyone.


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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by Mouth's Better Half »

My friends and I used to meet on snow days at the high school and walk to Moulten's Field to sleigh ride. Someone would build a fire ( the fire dept. never showed up) to keep warm and we would have fun for hours. When we just couldn't take the cold any longer we would walk to Hamburger Inn for hot chocolate and then home. No thought of any danger. A bunch of 14/ 15 year olds walking home in the dark. No cell phones, etc.

My son and gardening --- sorry TTT there is no ball of any form used in gardening. If there isn't some form of competition he isn't really interested.


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sportsfanatic85
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Re: Growing up in a small town.

Post by sportsfanatic85 »

I still live in a small town, but things just are not the same. Everything seems so
fast paced and rushed. Years ago you did not have to worry about locking your
doors, kids could play outside all day long with out the worries of all of the violence
that there is today. I sure miss the good ole days. Now I worry about my kids
going to school, where they are, what they are doing etc.. We did not have computers, cellphones, ipods, playstations, x-boxes, etc... We went outside and
played with our friends, rode our bikes, played in the creek, went sleigh riding,
had sleep overs and watched movies, listened to our 33's or 45's and had pizza and popcorn till we were almost sick. Things sure have changed!


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