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finger buns 5 things we just dont see anymore

Finger buns. Remember them?

 

 

 

 

Last week as I half listened to the tedious cricket commentary, I noted that Mark Taylor said he would have to tape an episode of “Alcatraz” because it was on so late at night. I snorted from the kitchen and cried ‘Tape? Tape!’ as I kept stacking the dishwasher. But it brought to mind something that my husband and I quite often reflect on with amusement: it’s our discussion, “how funny will it sound when we explain to our daughter…..”

Now a bit of context: we are Gen Xers in our mid thirties and our daughter is six months old. Let’s imagine the discussions with our daughter in the future, starting with Taylor’s “taping”:

1.When your dad and I were young we ‘taped’ programs on this thing called a video tape. They were big and clunky, and you had them stacked messily under a video player, which was this big box under the tv. Our job as the kid was to painstakingly hand-write the program name on a label on the tape, along with a message intended for the rest of the family – let’s say for instance, ‘21 Jump Street – tape over this and you die!’. And would you believe that when Poppy did regularly tape over shows they were gone FOREVER. You couldn’t even download the program or for that matter, even buy it. It was just gone – forever. Can you fathom that? Nup, it’s unfathomable. What was 21 Jump Street you ask? A programme that had the guy who plays Jack Sparrow in it. You know, from Pirates of the Caribbean 34? Yep, he pretty much looked like he does now – does the man ever age?

2. Yes, I do type quickly on the computer. That’s because in kindy I learnt to touch type on a typewriter. Look it up on Google. It had a ribbon in it, which our little kindy-sized fingers had to keep untangling from the keys. Amazingly, those typing skills have made me a valuable commodity at work. Yes, we did eventually get computers in primary school but we didn’t use them for educational purposes. No, just for playing a game called ‘Where In The World Is Carmen Sandiago?’ for, like, hours on end. And can you believe this? Years later in Year 12 we still hand- wrote all our homework and exams. Hand-wrote!!! And there was NO INTERNET! I know – utterly miserable… You looked things up at the library in a file of cards, and then found the book on the shelf. And then hand copied out the information. Yes, it was time consuming – now that I think about it….

3. No kiddo, you cannot go to the Big Day Out. Yes, Dad and I do have a clue what goes on there. We went when we were teenagers. Yep, that’s right, its been going that long! You didn’t invent it. But when we went, we caught the bus to the venue WITH OUR FRIENDS, and STAYED WITH THEM ALL DAY AND NIGHT! Why? Because no one had mobile phones to find each other. Yes, yes it seems unbelievable; but we can confirm that we all met up quite easily – and you always seemed to  be able to find each other when you did get lost – well actually, you mostly just stuck together all day. What bands played then? I seem to remember some fourteen year olds called Silverchair playing a set in the early days? They’re probably middle aged men now…sigh.

4. Back in our day, we waited until the shops were open to buy what we wanted, and buying something from overseas? Pfft!  There wasn’t even an inkling of online shopping back then. And now we’ll blow your mind- when we were primary school aged, the shops closed on Saturday at lunchtime and didn’t even open on Sundays!I know. No – we didn’t grow up in the outback thank you – this was the city!

5. You want me to order your lunch online for tomorrow – a Californian roll and mixed berry frappe? Wow, in our day there were only three options – a meat pie, sausage roll or a finger bun. Sushi? You’re kidding, right? When chicken burgers came on the menu it was like we had leapt into the new millennium… And to order, you put the exact money in a paper bag and it was sent down to the little corner shop, and two kids got to walk down to the shop before lunch and pick up all the orders in a milk crate. They had to carry a heavy crate of lunches back on their own?? I know, it was like child slavery back then wasn’t it….

How ever did we all survive?

Angie Holst is currently on 12 months maternity leave and had told all her colleagues that she was looking forward to being a lady of leisure for a year – she is still waiting for that leisure time to kick in.

What do you think you’ll have to explain to the generations of kids to come?

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307 Comments so far

  1. Ads

    I loved playing Carmen Sandiago at school! That was our reward if we finished our work early. My husband, who is 8 years my junior, has never heard of it and I feel as though he has missed out on something.

    Taping Young Talent Time and then recording the songs from the TV to the tape recorder so my sisters and I could pretend to be in the Young Talent Team. The modern revamp of the show is not the same but then I guess I am no longer their target audience at 34!

    I am almost jealous as I watch my son research projects for school all from the comfort of the lounge room. Then again I don’t have to do what my poor father had to do for me: drive me around to the local libraries while I searched for just the right book with just the right information :-)

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  2. Gin & Tonic

    Reef oil for sunbaking
    Making a mix tape by taping my favourites from the radio
    Plagiarising World Book Encyclopedia for school projects
    When 50c was the minimum chips at local fish and chip shop

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  3. Sue

    Banks not having ATMs so you had to get cash out before they closed. Getting paid in cash in little yellow envelopes with your pay/ tax details written on the front. Cardboard train tickets, ticket inspectors, 5cent Sunnyboys, 20cent refunds on glass Coke bottles, milk bars that sold milkshakes and sandwiches, lollies that were 2 for 1 cent. I already have been explaining this stuff to my children and students.

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  4. Cat

    Love it! I must be old if I remember all of this – I’m 24.

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  5. Jodi Gibson

    This is GOLD! Ah..those were the days. x

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  6. Dallas Wolf

    CARMEN SANDIAGO!! Take me back to those days!

    And life without social networking.. How bout those apples!

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  7. Lee

    What about a USB?? They weren’t around only a few years ago now… I remember relying on a dodgy floppy disk and hoping it wouldn’t corrupt itself and I’d lose everything!!

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  8. Ellamac

    I’m 26 I remember my mum and dad purchasing a set of encyclopaedia britannica for my sister and I for our school work, and then marvelling when we finally had a computer and we have the Microsoft Encarta CD-Rom. Even since I was at school, so much has changed!

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  9. Growing up in the 80s

    Remember when you had to blow into a plastic bag for an RBT?
    When a mobile phone number had an 018 prefix, and before that 007
    Bankcard
    “Jump for life” at primary school
    “Walking the dog” and other yo yo tricks
    Hopscotch, knuckles and handball (do kids still play these games?)
    Fluoro was cool and hyper colour t-shirts were all the rage

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  10. Jane DJ

    This is the best retro toy blog ever! Take a walk down 60′s/70′s/80′s memory lane.
    Clothes! Toys! Catalogues!
    http://www.plaidstallions.blogspot.com.au/
    Snoopy pj’s, anyone?

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  11. '70's chick

    loved being paid in crisp banknotes, that came in an envelope that somebody had to handwrite my detail/hours worked on! We used the greyhound buses to travel on holidays in – felt like it took about 3 days to cross the nullabor…. wearing everyday clothes to school because only the private schools had uniform….. sharing the cost of twin poles from the school canteen – it only cost 10c each pole! Walking to the post office whenever you needed to make a phone call….

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  12. Mo

    What about white and brown eggs? They used to be all mixed up in the carton. I’ve just ordered a new white chook so I can get a mixture of eggs again!!!

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  13. indigo

    I remember being at assembly in the morning in primary school and lining up taking turns to take a small glass bottle of milk (with an alfoil lid) and from a wire crate and drinking it before going in to class. If there were some left over there was the option of having another after play lunch. Mmmm, warm milk on a summers day. This wasn’t in the country, this was inner west Sydney.
    I also remember people smoking on public buses, in theatres and of course on planes. Ewww!!!!
    One was a genious if you could copy from vinyl onto cassette and fast fowarding/reversing to the track you wanted. Very cool.

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    • Singleinoz

      OMG, smoking and non smoking sections on planes – separated by a curtain, yeah right that works!

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  14. Mellyjh

    My daughter’s school has online canteen orders and I swear the menu (yes, they have a menu!) reads like it’s from a restaurant – sushi, iced tea, noodles, quiche etc. What does my daughter order? A hotdog with sauce, finger bun and a popper!! Goes to show, even with a plethora of choice, the classics never go out of style :)

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  15. Janine

    Mixed lollies, coconut smelling sunTAN lotion, swap cards( I still have mine), stripey socks with beige sandals and hot pants, only white bread, slides, my school case, saying ‘spunk’ and ‘do ya wanna go with me?’

    And my parents, records, Hair-the musical, creme de menthe, stones green ginger wine, boronia vermouth, tuna casserole, coon cheese and bridge parties…

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  16. smashleigh

    im 24 and i remember getting my older cousin to iron my hair (with an actual iron!) to straighten it for special days, like school photos and disco’s.
    i remember using an actual dictionary to look up the meanings of words.

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    • tallicachild

      I’m only 19 and I remember my cousin straightening my hair with an iron hahaha!

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  17. AS

    I’m 39. I just found my Donkey Kong and got it to work. I still remembered how to play it, scary and great fun.
    I remember our first computer in 1982 or so – you could only type in capitals. It was so exciting to get a computer with lower case. And to move on from daisy wheel to dot matric printers – you could even print pictures! I loved Carmen Sandiego.
    We hated our “touch typing” lessons in Year 9 with a piece of paper taped over our hands. It seems bizarre now as this was 1988 and computers were everywhere.

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    • Loquacity

      I was in Yr 9 in 1994 and we were still doing touch-typing lessons on typewriters then. Granted, though, they were the fancy-pants electric ones ;)

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      • Mary

        Yes and we had pieces of cardboard to cover our hands so that we couldn’t cheat. The teacher would record record our weekly speed and accuracy results on a graph kept up on the wall.

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  18. MissV

    I flicked on the tv and there was an old game of football on, and someone had printed out a sign on that paper that was perforated between each sheet and on each side with the holes. That bought back memories!

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  19. kerriann

    Spirograph !!!!!!
    I recently bought a complete original 1967 set on Ebay for my husband who on a recent trip home to visit family,( Christmas break I think ), the topic was raised and a heated discussion with his sister revealed that she still had his beloved set from their childhood and had no intention of returning it !!!
    I loved my set as a kid !!!

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    • Me Too

      I got a set for Xmas too when it first came out in the 60s and spent hours & hours making swirly patterns! Still got it somewhere too :)

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  20. Petal

    I wonder if our children are ever going to remember what it was like to sit in a doctor’s surgery and just, you know, look out the window?

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    • tallicachild

      our family dr always had toys and books in the waiting room, so we never just sat and looked out the window!

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  21. roses

    Atari, or a commodore 64 that our neighbour owned, was cutting edge technology.
    The milkman delivered milk, and you could buy other treats from his little ute/truck.
    getting sunburnt!
    no helmets on bikes
    drive in movies
    PANELVANS!!

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  22. Anonymous

    I’m the back end of Gen Y and I remember most of these things from my childhood (minus the typewriter and the file cards in the library)
    Scary how fast things change

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  23. Kathy W

    - Running out of film in your camera.
    - Paddle pops costing 5c
    - Round 50 cent pieces
    - Banks opening on Saturday morning
    - Cars having no seat belts
    - TV finishing at 11pm – with the national anthem as a send off.
    - Hanging by the rotary dial phone, waiting for your boyfriend to call and invite you to the movies, which cost $1.00 for the ‘dress circle’ and a choc top was a whopping 20 cents.

    OMG I feel old.

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    • Caz

      And talking of running out of film, actually only taking what you hoped was one really good shot, rather than 5 or 10, of any one thing because it was too expensive to keep snapping away at one thing and getting them all developed.

      And remember the little cartoon at the end of the day’s transmission where the kangaroo put the joey to bed and pulled up the blanket.

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    • tallicachild

      50 cent pieces were ROUND?!?!?!
      How did I not know this!? I remember being a kid and playing with the 1 and 2 c coins that my nan and pop had in a jar at their house. I was fascinated with them, and even more fascinated that my dad could buy 4 lollies for 1c when he was young!!

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      • Kathy W

        Yep – they were round AND made of silver – until the Mint figured the silver in the coin would eventually be worth more than 50c – and they changed to the current shape in the late 1960s because it was being confused with the 20 cent coin

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        • Jane DJ

          I think they’re now worth around $11 – $13 each due to the silver content.

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  24. M.

    Being asked if you would like to be seated in smoking or non-smoking when you go into a restaurant! I suppose before that there wasn’t even a ‘non-smoking’ area.

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    • Luna

      What about on the flights? To think of it now, still makes me shudder.

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  25. G

    My sister and I used to spend Summer afternoons munching down watermelon and having pip spitting competitions. My kids have such a huge choice of watermelons and they are all seedless.

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  26. AB

    What about Hobbytex? What a craze, back in the day!

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    • Hope

      …….and macramé and Holly Hobbie!

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  27. Snap!!

    If you had told me 20 years ago that we would be stupid enough to buy bottled water I would never have believed you & yet here we are.

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    • Petal

      Oh God yeah. I see people buying shitloads of water in supermarkets and I feel like screaming at them! Why??? Water from our taps is fine and it’s practically free!!!

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      • afd

        I still remember my grandfather’s comment in response to bottled water: “What’ll they be doing next, buying oxygen?” Well, actually….. there *are* actually ‘oxygen treatments’ or similar available, now, aren’t there? Kinda glad I never had to break *that* news to him! (Although of course, I wouldn’t regret it if he was still around! I’m sure YKWIM)

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      • Hayley

        I remember returning from the beach with friends and dad would line us up, turn on the hose, and give us a drink from the hose and wash our feet off one-by-one! no bottled water for us :) We always drank from the hose – much quicker than going inside the house!

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      • Anonymous

        Actually, water from my taps is not fine. It is absolutely revolting and regularly brown. However, if I was in Sydney or something I would totally agree with you.

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      • Kristie L M

        I buy water when I’m out simply because I don’t want softdrink or juice. But at home the tap is fine for me.

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  28. Monmon

    I had a Nokia 100 in my first year of uni…that was only in 1995!!! It was a brick, black and white screen, and could only save a few phone numbers…but soooo cool to have a mobile phone!!! :)

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  29. BecomingMum

    Does anyone remember when the number 9 was put in front of all numbers?? And when Telecom existed??

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    • Lorren

      Totally!! I was in primary school and we all went around trying to remember our new phone numbers.

      Remember when we all remembered phone numbers?!

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      • farkennel

        Telecom!!!!! I remember when it was the PMG!

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        • Caz

          Our neighbours had to share a phone line with their neighbours. Just pick up the phone to see if someone in the other house was talking and wait until they finished. No privacy there. I do still remember my phone number from then – back in the 50′s.

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      • Singleinoz

        Oh when everyone started each number with ’9′ then told you the number in three, two, two.

        I like to think I was the pioneer of saying phone numbers two, two, two, two LOL

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    • missamoo

      Yup my friend did the ads so we weren’t so scared of it haha

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  30. becauseimthemum

    I’m 38 and I remember getting commercial television. We lived in Blackwater in central Queensland and I was about 5 yo. The only channel we had was the ABC so the only thing I watched was Sesame Street. Then suddenly we had a one commercial channel to watch. Then I could also watch Here’s Humphrey.

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    • SunnygirlQ

      OMG! I was living in Blackwater when they got their first commercial channel – but to get it you had to have an antenna that was 5 metres high!
      Les Hardman and RTQ7.
      I remember going to Brisbane to visit relatives at holiday time and not being able to work out what was wrong with their TV – there was something on all the channels.

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  31. Mickie

    Anyone else remember the cards you could collect from the Weetbix boxes? You wrote away to get the poster to stick them too. Mum would go off her nut when the first kid to open a new box would destroy it to get the cards at the bottom.

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    • Luna

      I do! We still buy Weet-Bix and admittedly, not nearly as exciting compared to when I was a kid too.

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    • Caz

      Definitely, and remember the little toys in the cereal packet. And I remember mum collecting tokens from the Lanchoo tea packet and when you had enough you could go to a place in the city and redeem free gifts. Probaby the first loyalty program.

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    • Petal

      My mum used to collect the bird cards from Tynee Tips Tea. She had shitloads of them. In fact I think I’ve still got them somewhere…must check ebay…someone must be still collecting them…

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  32. kate

    I see finger buns in every bakery i go to….?

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    • Mary

      I think she meant that it was one product available on a very limited tuck shop list back then not that they aren’t still available.

      We use to live out in the sticks and we had tuck shop once a fortnight. Choice was sausage roll or pie and strawberry or chocolate milk. Terribly exciting!

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  33. Drew

    I recently dug out my old Nintendo Game & Watch handheld consoles. I had Fire Attack and Donkey Kong II.

    I saved up for months for Fire Attack. It cost over $40. I used the money I made getting up at 5.30 and delivering newspapers six mornings a week, for which I made $20 per week. And I used to fold every newspaper by hand and deliver them INTO PEOPLE’S LETTERBOXES. Y’know, not just litter them onto lawns or garden beds or gutters.

    Good times.

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  34. Anonymous

    I sat and pondered the thought that our children do grow up and they themselves become parents and reminisce just like we did with them. Then my husband reminded me that “the baton has passed on and we, as grandparents, now have become OUR parents”. Oh dear!
    Angie you recall the school lunch orders – I was “The Tuckshop Lady!”

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  35. Alexa

    I too am 38 and I also remember 1 & 2 cent pieces, paper money, milk that used to be delivered in glass bottles with a slight layer of cream on top, video player with BETA tapes, going to video stores to hire movies, watching A Country Practice on Monday and Tuesday nights, walkman’s with batteries that always ran out, going to the beach and eating fish and chips off newspaper, reading Judy Blume books.

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    • Lissa

      And didn’t the magpies love to poke their beaks in the silver tops of the milk bottles to get the cream. Our milkman was called Mr Steer (kid you not).

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    • ClaireC

      I was very pleased to hear that my daughter is reading Judy Blume as the feature author next term in grade 3.

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    • JAC

      I work in a school library and the girls are STILL reading Judy Blume books!

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  36. shane

    When I was about 5 years old;

    only 25% of houses had tv. This jumped when I was about 5 and a 1/2 because people wanted to watch a couple of blokes go for a stroll on the moon.

    No one knew where the Titanic was.

    only about 70% of hoses had telephones.

    Only the wealthy had air conditioners in their cars or houses.

    chicks went to the beach and basted themselves in coconut oil.

    Ashtrays were in every bank and post office, and everywhere else.

    Pubs closed at 6 pm.

    Email was a brand of fridge.

    If you had a fight at school, you got caned, not counselled.

    My mum got really excited because she just started to get the same pay as the bloke at the desk next to her.

    Bread was delivered door to door.

    Kids got a little bottle of milk every day at school.

    20 cents bought a pie, a snip and a finger bun for lunch.

    TV’s were black and white, and sometimes there was too much snow to watch the damn thing.

    nearly every kid walked or rode their bike to school.

    Things have changed somewhat!

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    • Petal

      Chicks? Lol.

      My husband’s first job was at Email and boy does it confuse the kids when he brings it up!

      20c used to buy me 5 potato cakes at the fish n chip shop. Mmmm

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  37. Luna

    I spent most of Year 7 to 10 at the local Library where there were rows and rows of books. You asked the Librarian where to find a subject. There were tables and chairs to write your assignments. I would come home only upon closing time and my mother knew where I was. Two months ago our local Library re-opened after being re-located. I took our 8yo son who wanted his own membership card to borrow his own books. The Library is now A THIRD of it’s original size! Less books, no tables just lounges and the Librarians had to use the computer to find things. Our son asked where all the books had gone, I just wanted to cry.

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  38. Benjamin woolmer

    As an interesting aside, I am the brother of the author and am currently posted in Louisiana where they still pay for groceries and other such items with a check (cheque for us Australians that can still remember them). We found it extremely novel and I had a moment where I was flashed back in time to filling out withdrawal and deposit slips in the Commonwealth Bank Dollarmites class. Ha! Did anyone else get that class from their local CBA manager?

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    • aholst

      We just started an account – you still get a piggy bank (a platypus, not a pink elephant) but you get an online password for your internet banking – no little blue book to get stamps in. How times have changed…

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    • Rach

      When we first relocated to the US last year, we were absolutely floored that not only did we get a checkbook, we were expected to pay our bills with it, and even the grocery store would take them! Some bills you can pay electronically, but some you still have to mail with the butt of the bill and a check.

      I had to Google how to write one…their system is a little less obvious than ours…felt a bit like I needed to step back in time!

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    • Anonymous

      There are a few oldies, and farmers, who shop at the supermarket I work at and pay with cheques, and it is THE MOST PAINFUL THING EVER! We have to ring up the bank each time to make sure they actually have the money. Incredibly frustrating.

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  39. Meg

    I’m 35, and grew up in the bush. I bought my first o/s purchase in 1992, a pair of Doc Martens from the uk. How was that for ahead of the times? I also remember just how cosmopolitan I felt when a family friend who lived in the States used to bring me back clothes.

    only having 4 TV channels, the look I got from my 5yo when I tried to explain that!

    My daughter’s 5 and the text messages I sent after she was born were sent on a mobile phone that didn’t even have a colour screen (i found it in the cupboard while spring cleaning the other day and had a chuckle as i sent my hubby a text about it by just saying to my phone “send a text to Rob, guess what honey?…”) Technology is moving faster, I swear!

    Great post! Happy memories.

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  40. Jo

    In this age of communication one of the things we’ve lost is real communication. Seems like actually taking the time to ring a friend for a chat (or heaven forbid, drop by unannounced) is on the way out. Quick text messages, emails & social media are taking the place of face-to-face / verbal communication. Good example is birthdays – RING someone, don’t send bloody text! The 30 messages I received let me know you (or your calendar alert) remembered my birthday but the 6 calls let me know who cared.

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  41. Shaezy

    My awesomely cool and massively chunky Walkman that ate batteries for breakfast and only had a fast forward button – so if you wanted to listen to a song again you had to take the tape out, turn it over and fast forward, then eject it again, turn it over and play, and hope you had got the right spot. Also, it had proper headphones with foam Princess Leia ear covers with the head band attached (although I have seen similar around today. Not half as cool….hehehe)

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  42. marijana

    oh the library one is good. we couldn’t just “google” it…

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  43. Jane DJ

    I was the height of technological advancement on my 13th biirthday with my canary yellow Sanyo cassette player that had APLD (Auto-play-locate-device) that meant I could fast forward to the exact Duran Duran song I wanted.
    The old fashioned lolly shop that has just opened up here had a massive bowl of Blackjack bubblegum on display – hadn’t seen it for years. Used to be on all deli/newsagent counters, complete with a free tattoo. We would plaster the chewed bubblegum over our teeth to create a toothless effect…

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  44. Lil

    Does anyone remember swap cards?

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    • Jane DJ

      Yes, I had a set of ABBA ones, and my brother had the KISS set.

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    • ClaireC

      I loved swap cards, I had them from when I was in grade 2 and I’m now 41. I had lots of horses, Tom & Jerry cartoons, loads of cats and dogs…gosh they were fun.

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    • Molly M

      Yes! I loved the Holly Hobbie ones!

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  45. curmudgeon

    I still pine for my beloved white ghetto blaster. It always held the same ‘mixed’ cassette tape comprising songs I had painstakingly recorded off the radio. I still sing a lot of (pre-90s) songs inclusive of random lines from radio jingles and DJ commentary.

    Sometimes I call Channel 10, Channel 0…but, that is usually when I am talking to my mum…usually.

    Thank you for reminding me of Carmen Sandiago :-) And now I NEED a ‘coffee roll’.

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    • Lizi

      I remember recording from the radio, too! Casey Kasem’s ‘American Top 40′. My dad believed music stopped at Beethoven, and couldn’t believe anyone could enjoy such junk. Poor Dad …

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      • kateinlondon

        ”Aaaamerican Top Forrrrrty”.

        Loved it.

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      • Haven Maven

        And you’d sit there with your cassette player with ‘play’ and ‘pause’ pressed at the same time and spew when they talked over the intro to a good song!

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  46. Sam Pidgeon

    I recall Summer at the end of year 6 in 1986/1987 when we got our first video & our first microwave oven. The microwave was still working at my brother’s house in recent years (they don’t make em like they used to) and the video had a remote control THAT WAS ATTACHED TO THE VCR WITH A WIRE!!

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    • Singleinoz

      We were lucky enough to get one of the first CD players in Australia. Problem was there weren’t very may CD’s around!!

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  47. Anonymous

    Our VCR remote was attached by cord.
    Smash Hits double cassette’s was what my pocket money was spent on.
    No bank cards but bank books with transactions printed in them.

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  48. Melissa

    Car radios with the push-button tuning. I remember my dad never had it on the station properly! Don’t know if it was the push-button method, or him that was the problem!

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  49. Mish

    I remember free time during touch typing classes, and we had a pattern to type, i.e. 5xX, 3 spaces, 7×0 and so forth, and you’d end up with a picture of a cat, or a halloween pumpkin. I tried explaining it to the kids and they just looked at me almost in pity, that something that took soooooo long amused us sooooo much!

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  50. RandomMon

    I loved making mix tapes. Would always make tapes from Triple J’s Net 50 so then on Monday I could play it on my sony walkman as I walked to school. As a kid I remember I used to love making my own radio shows with my best friend, hours of fun!

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    • Mary

      Me too. I used to listen to Triple J each night poised at the “record” button to try and get my favourite songs. I used to love video clips and I’d stay up all night to tape them from Rage. Thank goodness there wasn’t youtube around otherwise I would’ve been very very distracted!

      I still have all my mix tapes – I couldn’t throw them out and I sometimes put them on and go back to year 11 & 12. Good times.

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      • Jimmy's Girl

        … and didn’t you hate the announcers who wouldn’t stop talking when the song started, or came in too early before it was over! It always ruined the recording!!!

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