When I was young; 6,7,8 years old I was told not to come back until the street lights were on. So, I would grab a machete or any other tool I could find and I'd spend the majority of my days in the woods, building forts making huge mudslides and other shit that young boys do.
Of course, I have 3 brothers as well. So, you know my mom didnt want all of us in the house all day. Not to mention there was no video games or 500 TV channels to watch.
I wish my kids could experience the same things I did!
I don't even think we had bike helmets as a kid. Oh, wait I think some nancey boy tried to come into the woods where we had our bike track with one and he got jumped.
Wh used to jump off train bridges when I was kid. 30 foot high in 3 foot of water (you have to collapse when you land kinda go limp or you break your legs).
We would also run along side trains on that same track and use them to hitch across town.
I had a shutgun when I was ugh.. 5. I hated shooting it because it hurt my shoulder. We preferred to shoot each other with BB guns for fun.
We just had to be home when the street lights came on. That's it. We would often sneak back out after. I ran around with a group of 20-30 kids (don't see that anymore).
Tree houses, burning things, breaking things, doing shit kids do. If I do have kids they will be raised the same way. Hopefully they can find some non pussy friends to hang out with.
Yup, all this and more. Made "bombs", more like incendiary devices filled with petrol or whatever flammable shit we could find in the garage. Even took one to school once and asked the principal if I could light it off as some sort of show and tell experiment. He called the fire dept for advice and declined but if I had done that today they would have probably evacuated the school, tasered me, and expelled my ass.
I lit a discarded car fuel tank on fire once when I was about 5. Straight up lied to the RCMP officer that came to my house.
We stole a pile of black powder from a friend's dad who did his own reloads. Tried to make a bomb from that, but it didn't work so we just burned the lot of it. We'd collect up discarded fireworks after Halloween, gut them and do the same.
My dad had an old 22 bolt action in the closet. Got some ammo that was lying around in another kid's garage, dismantled the gun so we could stick the barrel and stock down the legs of our pants and walk through the neighborhood with it, and took the gun to the woods by the Coquitlam river.
There was a house and condo building boom in my area of Coquitlam growing up in BC, and we would roam the construction sites, climbing throughout the unfinished buildings like some huge jungle gym.
Stole elastic from our mother's sewing kits and made slingshot guns out of anything we could find. We made "crossbows" from 2 x 2s nailed into a T shape, office elastics made into a rope strung between the two ends of the T, firing 2 inch construction staples at each other. We'd make throwing stars from nails duct taped together. All kinds of shit. Looking back it was all rather quite creative. I could make a gun out of Lego and rubber bands that could break glass, or put yer fuckin' eye out.
Just about died river rafting (toobin') on the Nooksack river in Washington state when we all got sucked into a log jam. Not quite sure how we got out of that one, but we did.
Thing was, when I was like 5-7 years old I had shit tons more freedom than I did from 8 onwards. Reason being was a fellow named Clifford Robert Olson who, if you don't know, was a serial killer in the Vancouver area who had a knack for abducting and murdering kids in the early 80s. He scared the shit out of a lot of parents and things changed after that.
I think one of the main contributing factors to this is the isolation of modern society as well. Back when I was a kid, we were always outside, building forts, ramps, fires, jumping off the railroad bridge into the river, shooting each other with pellet guns, and loads of other stupid shit.
At the same time though, this was back in a day when you were just naturally good friends with your neighbors, and always knew loads of people around the community, because everyone was always out and about. Due to this, kids were always looked out for at somewhat of a certain minimal level, because there was always someone close by with an eye out, or to give a helping hand if needed, or whatever.
That type of society doesn't really exist anymore. Everyone sticks to themselves now more, which has been quite detrimental as it's helped deteriorate those societal norms. Now if you send you kid out to go around meandering on his / her own, you don't really know what you're sending them into, whereas before it was different. Before, there was a certain level of minimum protection your kid had regardless of where they went, whereas that doesn't really exist anymore.
Does that make any sense at all?
That's why in the photos of the poor countries, you see kids doing that stuff. There's still a sense of community there, so the parents know if something happens while their kid is out and about, there will be someone around to give a helping hand. That doesn't exist as much anymore in Western countries, because everyone sticks to themselves behind a computer, TV, video game, phone, whatever the fuck.
We preferred to shoot eachother with BB guns for fun.
Hell ya! BB Gun fights with metal trash can lids as shields were one of our daily activities. We used to also have bottle rocket fights too! :2gunsfiring_v1:
I remember one time my brother shot a fat kid in the ass crack with a bottle rocket and it got stuck in his crack and blew up. LMAO
Damn, I can still feel the sting from my dads belt from that night. In the seventies men wore belts that were like 2 inches tall... Covered half my ass with one smack! Those mofos hurt!
Poor little fat bastard wasn't allowed to play with us any more!
Bringing back memories here. lol.
In an essay called “The Play Deficit,” Peter Gray, the Boston College psychologist, chronicles the fallout from the loss of the old childhood culture, and it’s a familiar list of the usual ills attributed to Millennials: depression, narcissism, and a decline in empathy. In the past decade, the percentage of college-age kids taking psychiatric medication has spiked, according to a 2012 study by the American College Counseling Association. Practicing psychologists have written (in this magazine and others) about the unique identity crisis this generation faces—a fear of growing up and, in the words of Brooke Donatone, a New York–based therapist, an inability “to think for themselves.”
In his essay, Gray highlights the work of Kyung-Hee Kim, an educational psychologist at the College of William and Mary and the author of the 2011 paper “The Creativity Crisis.” Kim has analyzed results from the Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking and found that American children’s scores have declined steadily across the past decade or more. The data show that children have become:
less emotionally expressive, less energetic, less talkative and verbally expressive, less humorous, less imaginative, less unconventional, less lively and passionate, less perceptive, less apt to connect seemingly irrelevant things, less synthesizing, and less likely to see things from a different angle.
I think one of the main contributing factors to this is the isolation of modern society as well.
<snip>
At the same time though, this was back in a day when you were just naturally good friends with your neighbors, and always knew loads of people around the community, because everyone was always out and about. Due to this, kids were always looked out for at somewhat of a certain minimal level, because there was always someone close by with an eye out, or to give a helping hand if needed, or whatever.
That type of society doesn't really exist anymore. Everyone sticks to themselves now more, which has been quite detrimental as it's helped deteriorate those societal norms. Now if you send you kid out to go around meandering on his / her own, you don't really know what you're sending them into, whereas before it was different. Before, there was a certain level of minimum protection your kid had regardless of where they went, whereas that doesn't really exist anymore....<snip>
WTF?
"Modern society is evil" waaaaah, waaaaaaaaaah!
Do you know your neighbours?
No?
Why the fuck not?
Go out and meet them... it is not that hard.
We spent yesterday having a BBQ with our neighbours...
Our kids plays with the girls from next door, we chat with everyone regularly..
Yes, it may seem easier to turn invisible nowadays IF YOU WANT TO... but guess what?
You don't have to.
Society you live in doesn't suit you? Change it...
Well, that is said too simple.. thing is, the part of society that affects you most, your neighbors, your day to day routine, .. you can actually change that.
If you wanna meet people .. go out and meet people... what a concept!
::emp::
Do you know your neighbours?
Society you live in doesn't suit you? Change it...
While I try to not coddle my 3.5 yr old son, there are some things that are not going to be left out.
Helmet while wearing a bike is one.
Friend of mine got a fractured skull falling off his bike in elementary.
He survived, but yeah... fuck that.
::emp::
Hell ya! BB Gun fights with metal trash can lids as shields were one of our daily activities. We used to also have bottle rocket fights too! :2gunsfiring_v1:
I remember one time my brother shot a fat kid in the ass crack with a bottle rocket and it got stuck in his crack and blew up. LMAO
Damn, I can still feel the sting from my dads belt from that night. In the seventies men wore belts that were like 2 inches tall... Covered half my ass with one smack! Those mofos hurt!
Poor little fat bastard wasn't allowed to play with us any more!