In my Day
"In My Day..." winners and honorable mentions from the Washington Post
contest in which participants were asked to tell Gen-Xers how much
harder they had it in the old days:
Second Runner-Up:
In my day, we couldn't afford shoes, so we went barefoot. In
the
winter we had to wrap our feet with barbed wire for traction.
(Bill Flavin, Alexandria)
First Runner-Up:
In my day we didn't have MTV or in-line skates, or any of that
stuff. No, it
was 45s and regular old metal-wheeled roller skates, and the
45s always
skipped, so to get them to play right you'd weigh the needle
down with
something like quarters, which we never had because our allowances
were way
too small, so we'd use our skate keys instead and end up forgetting
they were
taped to the record player arm so that we couldn't adjust our
skates, which
didn't really matter because those crummy metal wheels would
kill you if you
hit a pebble anyway, and in those days roads had real pebbles
on them, not
like today.(Russell Beland, Springfield)
And the winner of the velour bicentennial poster:
In my day, we didn't have no rocks. We had to go down to the
creek and wash
our clothes by beating them with our heads.(Barry Blyveis, Columbia)
Honorable Mentions:
In my day, we didn't have dogs or cats. All I had was Silver
Beauty, my
beloved paper clip.
(Jennifer Hart, Arlington)
In my day, attitudes were different. For example, women didn't
like sex. At
least that is what they told me.
(Tom Witte, Gaithersburg)
When I was your age, we didn't have fake doggie-do. We only had
real
doggie-do, and no one thought it was a damn bit funny.
(Brendan Bassett, Columbia)
Back in the 1970s we didn't have the space shuttle to get all
excited about.
We had to settle for men walking on the crummy moon.
(Russell Beland, Springfield)
In my day, we didn't have days. There was only time for work,
time for prayer
and time for sleep. The sheriff would go around and tell everyone
when to
change.
(Elden Carnahan, Laurel)
In my day, people could only dream of hitchhiking a ride on a
comet.
(David Ronka, Charlottesville)
In my day, we didn't have fancy health-food restaurants. Every
day we ate
lots of easily recognizable animal parts, along with potatoes
drenched in
melted fat from those animals. And we're all as strong as AAGGKK-GAAK
Urrgh.
Thud.
(Tom Witte, Gaithersburg)
In my day, we didn't have hand-held calculators. We had to do
addition on our
fingers. To subtract, we had to have some fingers amputated.
(Jon Patrick Smith, Washington)
In my day, we didn't get that disembodied, slightly ticked-off
voice saying
'Doors closing.' We got on the train, the doors closed, and if
your hand was
sticking out it scraped along the tunnel all the damn way to
the Silver
Spring station and it was a bloody stump at the end. But
the base fare was
only a dollar.
(Russell Beland, Springfield)
We didn't have water. We had to smash together our own hydrogen
and oxygen
atoms.
(Diana Hugue, Bowie)
In my day, we didn't have Strom Thurmond. Oh, wait. Yes we did.
(Peg Sheeran, Vienna)
Kids today think the world revolves around them. In my day, the
sun revolved
around the world, and the world was perched on the back of a
giant tortoise.
(Jonathan Paul, Garrett Park)
In my day, we wore our pants up around our armpits. Monstrous
wedgies, but we
looked snappy.(Bruce Evans, Washington)
Back in my day, '60 Minutes' wasn't just a bunch of gray-haired
liberal
80-year-old guys. It was a bunch of gray-haired liberal 60-year-old
guys.
(Russell Beland, Springfield, & Jerry Pannullo, Kensington)
In my day, we didn't have virtual reality. If a one-eyed razorback
barbarian
warrior was chasing you with an ax, you just had to hope you
could outrun
him.
(Sarah M. Wolford, Hanover)