45 Things People Used To Do As Kids Back In The Day That Are Considered Totally Horrifying Now
Climbing trees as if you were Tarzan himself, riding your bike without even considering wearing a helmet, or turning an abandoned building into a playground—these are just a few examples of things kids do—or used to do back in the day, at least—that would make the hairs on parents’ necks stand up. (Though, these were arguably also some of the best childhood memories to some.)
Members of the ‘Ask Old People’ community recently shared what it is that they used to do that would make parents sick with worry nowadays. Redditor Ron, going by the moniker ‘ChillwithRon’ on the platform, started a thread about it and fellow netizens had plenty of stories to share. If you’re curious to see what adventures they would embark on as children, scroll down to find their answers on the list below.
Below you will also find Bored Panda’s interviews with the OP himself, as well as with the Professor and Department Head at the Department of Human Development & Family Studies at Colorado State University, Dr. Julie Braungart-Rieker, who was kind enough to answer a few of our questions about the importance of childhood adventures.
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Unsupervised play deep in the woods. It was glorious.
Anyone remember the scalding hot metal playgrounds in the summer, as kids?
Played with my friends on construction sites after the workers were gone.
From about age 8-10, they built a bunch of new homes in my neighborhood. We had so much fun playing in peoples houses when they were just wooden frames!
In an interview with Bored Panda, the user who started the thread, Ron, shared that he often finds himself reminiscing about his childhood in the ‘70s and noticing how drastically things have changed. “The carefree and adventurous spirit of those days seems so distant now, and I was curious to see if others shared similar memories,” he said, explaining the reason behind the question posed to the online community.
“I wanted to spark a conversation about the stark contrast between the freedom we had as kids and the more cautious approach to parenting today.”
Going to the public pool all day with a couple of my friends, minus any adults. We’d either ride our bikes or one of the moms would drop us off there at opening time and then pick us up late that afternoon at a pre-arranged time.
We all somehow survived it.
It was and is still common in my hometown that kids to go school by themselves. But this is Germany
The freedom kids have, or used to have, allows them to explore the unknown, which, according to Dr. Julie Braungart-Rieker, is an important part of kids’ development.
“There is an interesting balance between fear and excitement when it comes to facing something new or challenging. When children encounter something novel that they haven’t seen or done before—stumble upon a squiggly salamander in the mud, for example—they can feel a little unsure about this creature and they can be curious about it: ‘What is it? Can I catch it and hold it? Will it hurt me?’ So they might be drawn to something like this because it’s exciting,” she explained.
“Being curious about new situations like this one is very instinctual and promotes learning in children. Learning by interacting with the environment directly is a great way for kids to figure things out. In this example, they might learn that this salamander is squirmy, slimy, colorful, muddy, doesn’t bite, and is really fast despite its small size when it runs away. If a child was told the characteristics of a salamander by someone else, like a parent or a teacher, or saw it in a video, they just wouldn’t experience the same excitement because children aren’t interacting directly with the novel creature.”
Walked to the store by myself at 9 years old to get some items for my mom.
My friends and I made an Evil Knievel kind of ramp over a creek that ran in the back of our houses. We then tried jumping it on our bikes. No helmets of course. I was maybe 11 or 12.
Being left home alone & entertaining myself.
That's my entire generation. Gen-X never had any Fs to give.
I grew up in a small town in Indiana. My sisters were 7 and 10 years older than me, and mom's rule was they couldn't leave me alone at home, so I tagged along with them and their boyfriends all the time.
Indiana is littered with abandoned quarries, and they're the best swimming holes you can find.
10 to 100 acres big, 200 to 500 feet deep, or more. They'd fill with rainwater over the years, and with no current, they would just warm in the summer sun to about 85 degrees or more.
However. Below 15' or so, the water was about 58 degrees year-round.
While the boyfriends were 17-21 or so, I was 10/11.
And when the boys climbed up the walls and jumped into the water, I would follow.
You kept your shoes on, and dropped feet-first into the warm water, but you would zip down to 30' or more instantly. The cold shock would zip up your body and take your breath away, then it's time to struggle back to the surface. Sometimes, you'd run out of air about 2 or 3 feet down, and it's the most terrible feeling to expend your last bit of energy to cover that distance to sweet, sweet air.
I went back to visit many years later and found that we were routinely jumping from 60 and 70 feet to the water.
That was 50 years ago, and I can see it and smell it like it was yesterday. Plunging past the thermocline into freezing water in the summer is something that never leaves you.
And I'm pretty sure it was never Mom Approved^(TM).
The redditor said he was pleasantly surprised by the variety and depth of the responses. “It was incredible to see how many people had similar experiences and memories.”
But what surprised him the most was the universal nature of some of the activities, like playing outside unsupervised for hours, riding bikes without helmets, or engaging in risky games. “It highlighted how much childhood norms have shifted over the decades,” he said, adding that he was struck by some of the more extreme examples of freedom and risk-taking that people shared, which would be unthinkable today.
Delivering newspapers and collecting the money.
11-15 year olds waking up at 430-5am daily. Sitting on a corner (by themselves sometimes) and riding a bike around the neighborhood trying to throw news papers onto peoples porches.
Then every two weeks, going to every house to collect the money. Sometimes carrying around 50-100 dollars around in a pouch. To top it off, it was considered ok to be welcomed into the houses during winter when collecting the money. We definitely had encounters with what we considered ‘weird’ people. Now they’d be considered creepy af.
I did that - but we were paid by the newsagent. Maybe it's the weather but we had to get off the bikes and put the papers in the letter box. Sunday was harder work - bigger papers and supplements.
Babysitting younger kids at the age of 10. I guess I was responsible enough with my siblings that even neighbors would ask to hire me. Plus I'm male. Unheard of, especially nowadays.
Different times, I'm 70 now but in the mid 60's when I was about 10, summer holidays I would be, out with mates at the park playing football from early morning till it started getting dark. I'd take something to eat and drink. I had a key to my house and if mum and dad worked late if needed I was perfectly capable of cooking myself something basic. Maybe having family in the restaurant trade meant I was happy fending for myself in the kitchen. It was different, and in my mind better, times.
My sister and I *regularly* crawled through the storm drain tunnel in our town (we had to hunch over a bit, but it was pretty big). At the halfway point there was a road with a bus stop overhead and a drainage hole. We’d stand under it and use vulgar language at people waiting for the bus. Then we’d continue to the end of the tunnel where we’d sit and smoke a cigarettes. 🤦🏻♀️ (thank god neither of us got addicted, bit by a rat, or arrested).
and lucky with no rain and no flooding of the tunnel..
Load More Replies...CHECK. Except we didn't smoke or cuss at people. But the 3 foot (??) drain pipe ran all the way under our apartment complex from the railroad tracks to the other side of the road across from the apartments. There was one parking lot drain grate along the way. That was an obstacle if someone was washing their car. Otherwise it was dark but it was a straight pipe of maybe 100 meters or more so you could faintly see the light at the other end to orient on.
Discussing the activities of today’s children, Dr. Braungart-Rieker also suggested that it does seem that children get less opportunity to explore on their own currently than in the past.
“To my knowledge, we don’t have any solid data or research to show this is the case, but it’s easier to keep track of children now with technology than it was in the past, as now we have cameras, apps on phones, and similar means,” she said. “News about terrible things happening to children is also more readily available now which can fuel parents’ fear and anxiety that something bad will happen to their children.”
When I was in HS, I was really into high heels but had a long walk home. Random guys would stop and ask if I wanted a ride home. I’d jump right in with a smile. Nothing ever happened, but I would NeVER do that now or let my kids!!
Grew up in a hollow We spent one early spring cutting down trees with axes and buck saws and dragged them down to the creek We spent late Spring building a dam in the creek at the base of a small waterfall to make a swimming hole We spent the Summer at our swimming hole. Built a club house, made a rope swing and a fire pit. Would camp out there. Swim all night. Cook hot dogs on the fire We were around 11 years old.
I used to run around corn fields as a kid playing chicken with combines. 95% sure they couldn’t even see me.
I should be dead, honestly.
Even though nowadays making sure that children are safe is arguably easier than it was back in the day, the expert recommended trying to find a balance between that and allowing children to explore on their own (in an environment that is likely to be very safe).
“Getting dirty, falling down, picking up gross things in the mud might be messy but they can be fun to children and it allows them to learn about the world and themselves. If nature and other areas of novelty are not readily accessible to families, they might think about bringing something home that is unusual and even messy to allow their children to explore it and learn more about it.
“Even something as simple as baking something new gives kids an opportunity to get into the ingredients, feel them, measure or weigh them, and mix things which can get messy, stick whatever they made in the oven and see what happens to this mixture after baking,” she added. “That can be exciting to kids because they interact with the ingredients and create something new from them. Parents can be there to assist and watch their kids have fun with this situation.”
We lived on a lake with channels that went on for miles through woods. I used to get on my bike and spend the day catching frogs, crawdads, turtles and snakes. Sometimes I would build a small fire and eat the crawdads and frogs. One time I found a poor snake who had a fishing hook and line caught in its mouth. I took it home and was using my dads pliers to get the hook out. He came up and snatched that snake up so fast and tossed him into the woods. I was like, "Im trying to save him!" He said "Thants a gaddam cotton mouth! You could of died!" Lol I was grounded for 2 weeks and had to read a book on snakes. Heh.
I lived on Guam about ten years after WWII and in certain areas ammunition had been unceremoniously dumped, other places where it had been left by the soldiers in the heat of battle.
Anyway we used to go looking for the ammunition, and then, here comes the fun part, when we found it, we disarmed it, cleared it up and added them to my collection.
I knew how to completely unload Japanese and American frag grenades, knee mortars, and shells below 40mm.
Every few weeks or months you would hear about kids trying to disarm bombs killing themselves. Never touched one.
I was eleven.
This is the most dangerous of all. Forget hitchhiking, construction sites and homemade rockets, disarming live ammunition is a no-no.
Sat in my dad's lap while he drove. From ages 2-6 would regularly sit on the arm rest between the seats in the front seat of the car (so I could see where we were going, obviously). Would push the lighter in (to heat it) in the car so mom could smoke while we drove around (pretty sure all the windows were up, too).
The OP seconded the idea that part of the reason for change between childhood then vs childhood now is parents’ sense of safety and the use of technology.
“The biggest change, in my opinion, is the level of parental supervision and the general sense of safety and freedom. When I was a child, it was normal for kids to roam the neighborhood, explore, and find their own fun without constant adult oversight. Today, there’s a much stronger focus on safety and structured activities,” Ron said.
“Technology has also significantly changed childhood, with kids spending more time indoors on screens rather than playing outside. Additionally, societal attitudes toward parenting and child safety have become much more cautious, influenced by a heightened awareness of potential dangers.”
My sister and I rode for hours home from vacation one time. We were sitting on lawn chairs in the back of our Dad’s truck….
People here got random downvotes, which I don't like. Take my upvote
I used to babysit, at the age of 13-17, for families I didn't know before that night. Yes, they were recommended by other parents, but quite often the first time I met the parents would be when they came to my house to pick me up. The dad - a 30something man previously unknown to me - would then drive me to their house, where I would meet the kids, and the parents would go out on their date or whatever. Then, at 11 or 12 at night, they would come home. The dad, quite likely already drunk, would then pay me and drive me home along narrow country roads.
Yes - I also did this. Also had some pretty awful experiences with the dads. Plus I was an absolutely terrible babysitter.
We used to go up in the hayloft of a neighbors barn and grab a rope and swing across the whole barn and fly thru the air into the hay pile on the other side. : 0.
Oh, this has unlocked a childhood memory for me! I forgot we used to do that!!
“Parents naturally want to protect their children, which is a good instinct. But there’s a balance between allowing your child to explore new situations while keeping them safe,” Prof. Braungart-Rieker emphasized. “Obviously, if a small child were to approach something dangerous like the edge of a raging river, the parent would want to make sure that any exploration would be done in a safe way: ‘Don’t get in that river because the rapids are too fast right now but what else could we explore? Maybe there’s a salamander under a rock near the river?’”
I rode in railroad boxcars. From my northern New Jersey town's railyard up into New York and back again. Running and jumping in was crazy stupid.
I remember trips to the amusement part - Cedar Point in Ohio - that was about an hour drive. The three of us boys would all clamber into the back of the station wagon and rough house away during the drive. Pushing shoving, rolling around in cargo area while dad smoked and mom yelled at us to simmer down .
No seat belts, second had smoke wafting back, windows open. Ah the joys of being a young child in the 60's! And here I am, as are my brothers, alive and well in our 60's!
Why aren't they making station wagons anymore? I love Station Wagons!
There was a swimming hole near our Alabama home in a creek. In order to use the hole, you had to throw a couple of large rocks into it. This caused the water moccasins to run out of the water and into the woods. We would then swim here. Crazy, I know.
Ron shared that some of his fondest memories were playing outside with his friends until the streetlights came on, building forts out of cardboard, and going on adventures in the woods or local parks.
“I loved riding my bike everywhere and experiencing a sense of freedom that felt boundless,” he added. “We often played games that we invented, which involved a lot of imagination and creativity. I also cherished family road trips, even if we didn’t wear seatbelts all the time, as they were a source of great stories and bonding moments. These experiences were a significant part of my childhood, fostering independence and a love for the outdoors.”
Oh God. Don't come for me. I know I'd never be able to run for public office because of this.
I played a character in a play who was supposed to be black. I am not black. So... Yeah.
At the time my black friends loved it, we all thought it was hilarious, they and took me under their wing to teach me things. It was a different world.
As a black person, I don't get offended by something like this, as long as it's not meant in an offensive way, people get triggered too easily nowadays. Recent case in Germany - Dutch fans dressed up as Ruud Gullit, blackening their faces, "everyone" was offended, everyone except Ruud Gullit himself - https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-13543987/Ruud-Gullit-Dutch-fans-blackface-Euro-2024-Poland.html
Yippoing Grew up in northwestern Pennsylvania, on the shores of Lake Erie. Think “lake effect” snow. At least 100 inches a season. We would go out at night and wait for a car to come by, run to the back and grab the bumper and get pulled as far as we could without falling off. Our parents had no idea, my mom blanched visibly when we told her about it just several years ago, and we had done this about 35 years ago. My stupid cousin lost my best mittens this way 😂.
I fell out of a tall tree and broke my leg and crawled home. Just a block fortunately. But I was embarrassed that I fell (I was way too high up and a branch gave way) so I crawled in my room and lay on the floor and didn’t tell anyone. My younger sister was the only one home and she wasn’t paying attention (we were 9 and 5 and used to get left home alone all the time). Hours later my mom came home and I didn’t tell her and she only figured it out because I wouldn’t get up to get into bed. She was so pissed she made me wait till the next day to see a doctor rather than spend the night at the ER. I slept most of that afternoon and might have had a concussion too. Never got checked for anything but the leg.
Do kids still get to climb trees? I did it obsessively and was mostly very careful and good at it. I don’t know what possessed me to be an idiot that day. The temptation to see further I guess.
I was doing some sweet tricks on the old school giant wheel scooters one day. Ripped a hole all the way though my heal. Almost took out the tendon. Didn't notice until I tried to put weight on it and noticed blood everywhere. Scooted on one knee to get back with a trail of blood behind me. Got home to the driveway but couldn't make it further. Neighbor came out looked at me went straight back inside. Friend got my mom who like 20 minutes later annoyed came out with these tiny bandages. Lost her mind when she saw me. Was on crutches for months.
“I think it's important to remember that while some of the things we did as kids might seem reckless by today’s standards, they also contributed to our sense of independence and resilience,” Ron said.
“However, it's also crucial to strike a balance between safety and freedom for children today. Encouraging outdoor play and creativity while being mindful of modern-day risks can help create a well-rounded and fulfilling childhood experience. It’s fascinating to see how societal norms evolve, and conversations like this can help us appreciate the past while navigating the present.”
Besides the things you mentioned, I also built model rockets. Also, tricks off the high dive at the local swimming pool. These days public pools don’t even have diving boards, let alone high dives.
This was not a regular occurrence for me, but when I visited a family in rural Tennessee a group of kids got together after dark, formed two groups, and shot bottle rockets across the field at each other as long as they lasted.
Wow, we all got together after dark but we just played flashlight tag. No explosives involved. :)
I was born in 1965. We lived on a very busy Main St in small town Indiana. When I was 4/5/6 years old, if it rained - my grandparents would let me put my bathing suit on and go stand on the sidewalk, so I was sprayed when cars drove through the puddles passing the house.
We made homemade fireworks..
We built rockets. The solid rocket engines were sold, prior to some laws being made stricter, by mailorder services that just required a copy of your ID. We, pretty soon, figured that retrieving the rockets was pretty much impossible, due to them always landing in an abandoned factory and the surrounding thereof. We even built twostaged rockets, with one engine being glued into the - stiff enough! - paper tube, and the other just losely stuck in, but firing up the second with the blowout charge that was, usually, meant to open a parachute. Which we didn't. Sometimes, we included some minor fireworks to be able to see where they went. One time, we cut the heads of some hundred matches and put that atop the second stage - was less spectacular than expected, but still, we could trace the path it was flying. A few ones, I found and was able to collect, even reused the fins, if there weren't too burned up. Fireworks ... not so much. But, it was fun!
Running after the "smoke truck" that sprayed insecticide in our neighborhood.
Bottle rocket wars with my friends. It's a wonder we didn't put an eye out.
Buying cigarettes at age 8 (for my mom who had provided a note), riding in the back of pickup truck on highway, no seatbelts, driving at age 10 (with dad in passenger seat) on country roads, hitchhiking with my dad after our car broke down, and my car seat as a baby was a laundry basket on the floor of the car.
I learned to drive when I was 11 and my aunt and uncle lived up on the mountain... My dad would get hammered and have me drive his old Ford LTD boat home! Telling me to use the hood ornament to stay situated in between the lines! Looking back I'm amazed we made each time! I'm a pretty good driver these days tho so it taught me a lot! 🤣🤣
I’ve already said this once, but as young teen girls, we would cross a huge empty lot in order to get to the mall. Most of the time there was a guy riding his bicycle in the lot with his d**k hanging out. Back and forth. Back and forth. We told our mothers who just said not to look at him and he won’t bother you. They never called the police or stopped us from taking the shortcut. God only knows what could have happened to any of us, especially when we walked alone.
My best friend and I were spit sisters. You each spit into your hand, then rubbed and shook each other's hand. Less cleanup than the blood brothers' pledge.
Walking solo to school over a mile away, in blizzard conditions. Riding bikes for miles, no helmet, no water, over all sorts of roads, plus going to the park by yourself -- with no one knowing truly your whereabouts.
Climbing really old trees to the very, very top, often requiring an older sibling to figure out how to get you down.
Watching the stars at night after climbing out on a precarious roof.
Skipping school to go fishing along a major river.
Might not be "horrifying," but not as many kids today had our freedom to try.
I had part of a slanted roof next to the window in my bedroom and used to climb out there at night to look at the stars. When it was cold I'd take a blanket with me. It wasn't steep at all, but I'm sure my parents would have put a stop to it if they'd known.
I stole cigarettes from my mom and got caught in 6th grade. It was a big deal and I felt horrendously guilty, even though my mom was pretty nice about it.
My brother and his friends started a fire from having match fights, you know where you light the match and fling at each other at the same time? They barely successfully stomped it out.
I told a neighbor girl my dog would bite her if she pushed me, she pushed me and my dog bit her.
We drew up a very elaborate battle plan in order to ambush by dirt clod a neighborhood kid who hated getting dirty.
I walked my bike up a very very steep mountain road repeatedly and rode my bike straight down the middle of the road, like an idiot. On a regular basis.
Made pancakes from pancake mix a neighbor threw away, and we ate the dough. More authentic than mud pies, and edible!
Rock & Dirt Clod battles.
There was a medical clinic near our house. They would dump the test tubes full of blood into the big trashcan. We liked those glass tubes with stoppers so we pulled them out and washed out the tubes so we could play with them.
Children playing with biohazards was not on my cozy nostalgia bingo card.
For the most part, my parents kept me on a fairly tight leash, but one thing I never understood is why my parents thought it was okay to send me on foot to kindergarten without an adult. The trail started behind the barrier of a dead-end street, wound past a cornfield, then past an apartment complex before it took me to school. Today someone would call CPS for letting their 5 year old do something like that.
I was also allowed to explore a brushy area behind our house that had the remains of some old structures. I was 8 or 9. My friends and I also liked to explore the remains of an old trailer park. The mobile homes were long gone, but there was an uncovered, unfenced swimming pool that always contained dark, festering water, and I once nearly fell into a hole near there. My leg went all the way in and my friends had to grab my arms and pull me out. We continued playing.
Then again, this was an era when no one batted an eye about sending all of us kids to school during a tornado warning. I had nightmares for a bit after that experience, but I got over it and grew up to have no fear of storms, just a healthy respect for them.
Abandoned structures can make awesome meetup places, especially if other groups have been there before
My uncles used to scramble on top of the barn. It has a metal roof. They thought it was fun to slide down it and “fly”. Good thing kids bounce and the ground was soft.
I was a cute little girl with few friends. Often rode my bike down the back alleys. There were usually guys hanging out in their garages which faced the ally. I would stop and talk to them. In retrospect…that’s not a good idea. Cute little me was too friendly and curious.
We had BB gun fights. Only 2 rules, no shooting anyone above the belly and if you had a pump up BB-pellet gun, no more than 2 pumps.
Think paint ball with BB guns.
My family was among the first residents of the newly developed town/city I grew up in (moved there in 1964 as some of the first 3000 residents) and there were new houses being built all over including nearby through the 1970s. My sisters and I along with the other kids in the neighborhood would play in the houses before the "skin" was put on. heck even after the drywall was put on. These days I imagine if there was a new house being built they'd put a chain link fence around it to keep people out but not those days. There were nails and scrap pieces everywhere...we could have easily stepped on something that would send us to the doctor. Fortunately that didn't happen to us.
Once we were old enough (I think probably 8 years old) we (or maybe just me!) were allowed to pretty much roam at will through the town. I was into bird watching so would ride my bike or walk the distance to the marsh at the side of the bay with my binoculars and Peterson field guide and bird list and see if I could find any new species around. Yes, I was a nerd.
Also around 1974-75 our town started a bus system to the mall in the next city over (it went other places but that's where we wanted to go) it only cost 10 cents at the time. So I'd ride to the mall, hit up Sears for bridge mix or popcorn, slide down the slide at the children's shop/toy store, look through the albums at the record shop, and just hang out for some hours. It was great to get away from the house and family for awhile.
Also fireworks were legal at that time but they wouldn't allow kids under 18 to purchase them.
Had a friend who had a trampoline in their back yard along with a piece of a surplus army tank probably from WWII or Korea. We'd jump on the trampoline then get into the tank and rock it back and forth until we got nauseous. Of course these days if you have that stuff on your property your insurance company will cancel you.
Delivering newspapers and collecting the money.
11-15 year olds waking up at 430-5am daily. Sitting on a corner (by themselves sometimes) and riding a bike around the neighborhood trying to throw newspapers onto peoples porches.
Then every two weeks, going to every house to collect the money. Sometimes carrying around 50-100 dollars around in a pouch. To top it off, it was considered ok to be welcomed into the houses during winter when collecting the money. We definitely had encounters with what we considered ‘weird’ people. Now they’d be considered creepy af.
I think about my own kids; telling them to wake up at 430AM 7 days a week and expecting them to perform well at school would just be irresponsible.
I loved my paper route. And yes-- Ollie ting the money--you'd knock. They'd bring me right into the house while they got their money. Honestly never thought anything was strange about that. This would have been about 1956 - 1960.
I hitchhiked everywhere I went from 1974 - 1984. Lots of serial k*llers were active and out there at the time. I am convinced that God hand His hand over me (still does!).
I seen a few comments that are like, "Yeah I did this and we're all still alive to tell the tale," as though the activity was harmless. The thing of it is, YOU'RE alive to tell the tale, but there WERE kids who died playing in refrigerators or diving in quarries or whatever. Don't assume that young people today are cowards for avoiding clearly dangerous things.
I loved it being free.We learned a lot about selfresponsibility and selfesteem without a tight protection frame.Of course luck was a factor too. Nowadays everythimg seems to be a risk but still there are dying kids in the same amount. I would like to know,what younger generations think about.. Were our parents just out of mind( not aware) or would you love to do such things too? What risks are nowadays you are now aware of ,you would protect xour future kids?
Yes, a common cognitive bias. I did this and turned out fine! Congratulations, you have successfully completed a study with a sample size of 1.
Load More Replies...Bored Panda Staff: "Let's repost this list every week. It's easier than finding new content."
What has happened to American society is "Path of Least Resistance" everything has been reduced to its lowest common denominator. Easier, quicker, comfortable, cheaper, more pleasurable etc etc. Not change for the better but change for convenience.
Load More Replies...Ah, the caterpillar apocalypse, when the entire northeastern United States was coated with gipsy moth caterpillars, genetically engineered to spin silk, with which they'd zip down from trees, poisonous to all native predators. We'd clear tree trunks by making flamethrowers with Lysol bottles. If you think a cicada outbreak is bad, you haven't seen anything.
My Girl Scouts juniors troop went camping during that. The horror….
Load More Replies...We did all that kind of stuff and we survived. Well, except for the ones who didn't. But we tend to forget those. I do think people nowadays can go overboard with being overly protective and not giving kids enough freedom. But there were also things back in the day that were seriously dangerous and it's a good thing that awareness around safety has improved.
do i think that things have changed and become more dangerous than they were in the past? or that parents are more aware now? i'm not sure. i know that there have been those people who assaulted others and serial killers and the like around for centuries. it may be that we are more 'plugged in' and know of such things faster. but, in regards to the old school playgrounds - i am surprised more kids didn't get hurt.
What has happened to American society is "Path of Least Resistance" everything has been reduced to its lowest common denominator. Easier, quicker, comfortable, cheaper, more pleasurable etc etc. Not change for the better but change for convenience.
I'm currently a teenager, and I don't get this kind of stuff really. I'm pretty lucky though compared to some of my mates. My younger neighbours and I, I'm the oldest, we often spend all our weekends and holidays running over the road barefoot like "do you want to come out to play?". My youth group too, we often have stupid nights like this. Climb a mountain and walk a few ks to maccas, go play spotlight in an empty overgrown paddock, have a massive bonfire and go explore an old chook shed (we got in trouble for that one, it was all rotting and falling), run around the school at night playing hide and seek. Usually there's no major incidents, we usually all make it back, and it's good fun.
I remember when my grade school would send me and my other eight-year-old classmates around town knocking on strangers' doors and entering their homes in order to sell them candies and candles to pay for catholic school events. Wtf.
Climbed to the top of houses under construction. Wandered out and about until the streetlights came on. Built bale forts and slept under the stars every late summer. But the one thing my dad finally threw a track at? We also stole rectangular corn bales from the field behind our house, made a deep heap of straw, then climbed to the top of the tallest tree (oak) in the woods and leaped into the mounded heap. It felt like flying. I have no doubt the distance was way shorter than the gazillion feet we imagined it to be. In hindsight, dad was absolutely right that the heap could have thinned in places. Or we could have missed entirely. But since I’m not dead or paralyzed; fond, fond memories of being an idiotic child in the 70’s.
My brother and I used to grab the longest branch we found on the floor and use it to hit wasps nests until they fell to the ground and cracked. Then we would run for our lives. The bzzzzz right after it cracks is quite terrifying. Also, as a 15yo l used to hitchhike home whenever l met my friends in the neighbouring village. Looking back, l shudder a bit.
this is why parents are fond of high control and all but locking kids in: they knew what they did was STUPIDLY dangerous and were insanely lucky to live.
A lot of 'we did this and we're still alive.' Yeah, well a lot of kids are not alive bc of dangerous activities. There's a difference between being okay and being lucky.
Jarts. Grandma had a set for us to play with.
Load More Replies...Grew up in the 80s in a pretty safe town in the US. We ran wild in the summers from the time our feet hit the floor until the streetlights came on. No check-ins, no hydration breaks, no supervision. Got up to a lot things we never told our parents about. I miss those days.
I was born in 65... They had dances at our local Legion Club in rural eastern Canada and on Sunday mornings, I would go search for money in said club's parking lot. Remember, those were the days way before bank cards so people carried cash... Some guys, either just drunk or who got involved in some fight, would lose some of this cash (change, small bills) and guess who was scrutinizing the area after the aftermath ... ;-) I remember I found a $10 bill once... I thought I was a millionaire... haha
We lived near the Mississippi River, and a branch of it broke off and ran through the back of our neighborhood. This little branch was where the barges had to slow down to make a turn so it was a common spot for the river hobos to jump off the boats and wait to catch the next one. I used to go down to the hobo camp and hang out with them. These were grown men that hopped the river boats to go from town to town or were running away from something like the police.
Would tie a long rope to the tow hook of the truck, put knots in the rope about every 6 feet, and drive across the snow dragging it behind. Maybe 5-10mph. Tons of kids would grab on and get pulled across the snow. After a bit would add in some turns. Did the same in the summer with a patch of carpet attached to the riding mower going slow and try to surf the grass. In both cases, we were going slow enough anyone who fell wouldn't be injured and could run back up to hop on again.
Admittedly, my brother and I weren't little kids, probably 15 and 21. Our crazy stupid was riding bikes in an office park on the weekends when there was no traffic and intentionally running into each other. No, we did not have lead exposure as youngsters.
Yes you did - in the air pollution from leaded petrol. But probably no more than most.
Load More Replies...I seen a few comments that are like, "Yeah I did this and we're all still alive to tell the tale," as though the activity was harmless. The thing of it is, YOU'RE alive to tell the tale, but there WERE kids who died playing in refrigerators or diving in quarries or whatever. Don't assume that young people today are cowards for avoiding clearly dangerous things.
I loved it being free.We learned a lot about selfresponsibility and selfesteem without a tight protection frame.Of course luck was a factor too. Nowadays everythimg seems to be a risk but still there are dying kids in the same amount. I would like to know,what younger generations think about.. Were our parents just out of mind( not aware) or would you love to do such things too? What risks are nowadays you are now aware of ,you would protect xour future kids?
Yes, a common cognitive bias. I did this and turned out fine! Congratulations, you have successfully completed a study with a sample size of 1.
Load More Replies...Bored Panda Staff: "Let's repost this list every week. It's easier than finding new content."
What has happened to American society is "Path of Least Resistance" everything has been reduced to its lowest common denominator. Easier, quicker, comfortable, cheaper, more pleasurable etc etc. Not change for the better but change for convenience.
Load More Replies...Ah, the caterpillar apocalypse, when the entire northeastern United States was coated with gipsy moth caterpillars, genetically engineered to spin silk, with which they'd zip down from trees, poisonous to all native predators. We'd clear tree trunks by making flamethrowers with Lysol bottles. If you think a cicada outbreak is bad, you haven't seen anything.
My Girl Scouts juniors troop went camping during that. The horror….
Load More Replies...We did all that kind of stuff and we survived. Well, except for the ones who didn't. But we tend to forget those. I do think people nowadays can go overboard with being overly protective and not giving kids enough freedom. But there were also things back in the day that were seriously dangerous and it's a good thing that awareness around safety has improved.
do i think that things have changed and become more dangerous than they were in the past? or that parents are more aware now? i'm not sure. i know that there have been those people who assaulted others and serial killers and the like around for centuries. it may be that we are more 'plugged in' and know of such things faster. but, in regards to the old school playgrounds - i am surprised more kids didn't get hurt.
What has happened to American society is "Path of Least Resistance" everything has been reduced to its lowest common denominator. Easier, quicker, comfortable, cheaper, more pleasurable etc etc. Not change for the better but change for convenience.
I'm currently a teenager, and I don't get this kind of stuff really. I'm pretty lucky though compared to some of my mates. My younger neighbours and I, I'm the oldest, we often spend all our weekends and holidays running over the road barefoot like "do you want to come out to play?". My youth group too, we often have stupid nights like this. Climb a mountain and walk a few ks to maccas, go play spotlight in an empty overgrown paddock, have a massive bonfire and go explore an old chook shed (we got in trouble for that one, it was all rotting and falling), run around the school at night playing hide and seek. Usually there's no major incidents, we usually all make it back, and it's good fun.
I remember when my grade school would send me and my other eight-year-old classmates around town knocking on strangers' doors and entering their homes in order to sell them candies and candles to pay for catholic school events. Wtf.
Climbed to the top of houses under construction. Wandered out and about until the streetlights came on. Built bale forts and slept under the stars every late summer. But the one thing my dad finally threw a track at? We also stole rectangular corn bales from the field behind our house, made a deep heap of straw, then climbed to the top of the tallest tree (oak) in the woods and leaped into the mounded heap. It felt like flying. I have no doubt the distance was way shorter than the gazillion feet we imagined it to be. In hindsight, dad was absolutely right that the heap could have thinned in places. Or we could have missed entirely. But since I’m not dead or paralyzed; fond, fond memories of being an idiotic child in the 70’s.
My brother and I used to grab the longest branch we found on the floor and use it to hit wasps nests until they fell to the ground and cracked. Then we would run for our lives. The bzzzzz right after it cracks is quite terrifying. Also, as a 15yo l used to hitchhike home whenever l met my friends in the neighbouring village. Looking back, l shudder a bit.
this is why parents are fond of high control and all but locking kids in: they knew what they did was STUPIDLY dangerous and were insanely lucky to live.
A lot of 'we did this and we're still alive.' Yeah, well a lot of kids are not alive bc of dangerous activities. There's a difference between being okay and being lucky.
Jarts. Grandma had a set for us to play with.
Load More Replies...Grew up in the 80s in a pretty safe town in the US. We ran wild in the summers from the time our feet hit the floor until the streetlights came on. No check-ins, no hydration breaks, no supervision. Got up to a lot things we never told our parents about. I miss those days.
I was born in 65... They had dances at our local Legion Club in rural eastern Canada and on Sunday mornings, I would go search for money in said club's parking lot. Remember, those were the days way before bank cards so people carried cash... Some guys, either just drunk or who got involved in some fight, would lose some of this cash (change, small bills) and guess who was scrutinizing the area after the aftermath ... ;-) I remember I found a $10 bill once... I thought I was a millionaire... haha
We lived near the Mississippi River, and a branch of it broke off and ran through the back of our neighborhood. This little branch was where the barges had to slow down to make a turn so it was a common spot for the river hobos to jump off the boats and wait to catch the next one. I used to go down to the hobo camp and hang out with them. These were grown men that hopped the river boats to go from town to town or were running away from something like the police.
Would tie a long rope to the tow hook of the truck, put knots in the rope about every 6 feet, and drive across the snow dragging it behind. Maybe 5-10mph. Tons of kids would grab on and get pulled across the snow. After a bit would add in some turns. Did the same in the summer with a patch of carpet attached to the riding mower going slow and try to surf the grass. In both cases, we were going slow enough anyone who fell wouldn't be injured and could run back up to hop on again.
Admittedly, my brother and I weren't little kids, probably 15 and 21. Our crazy stupid was riding bikes in an office park on the weekends when there was no traffic and intentionally running into each other. No, we did not have lead exposure as youngsters.
Yes you did - in the air pollution from leaded petrol. But probably no more than most.
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