SERENDIPITY

Marilyn Armstrong — Seeking Intelligent Life on Earth

I can’t believe we made it

| 18 Comments

Thank you Tom Curley for sending me the clip and reminding me — we really did make it!

I’m not one of those people who romanticizes the 1950s, but there are some truths that are worth remembering and revisiting.

We lived in a very different world, where play meant using imagination and physical activity, not technology. If you were having a hard time with the bullies in school, you got up, got dressed and went to school anyhow. It wasn’t your parents problem … it was yours.

Marilyn - Senior YearYou didn’t get a lot of pats on the back for “trying hard.” You might get an “attaboy” for doing exceptionally well, but you were expected to do your best. That was your job and you took it seriously or else.

96-BabyOandMe-HPYou learned your lessons in elementary school so you could go on to junior high school and then high school. You had to do well in high school because if you didn’t, you couldn’t get into college. And we knew if you didn’t go to college, you couldn’t go to heaven.

My son commented the other day that we are raising — speaking of my granddaughter’s age group — a generation of weenies. We are protecting from them life, from acquiring coping skills they will need to survive when mommy isn’t going to be there to bail them out. I said this to my granddaughter too, because she needs to hear it: no one gets a free pass. Even being rich doesn’t guarantee that bad stuff won’t happen to you, that you won’t get sick, lose a loved one, a child, or for that matter, your own health. Nothing prevents life from happening to you. Pain is part of the package and learning to deal with adversity is called “growing up.” If you don’t learn to cope, don’t learn to fight your own battles, when you get out there, you won’t survive.

Just about every family has a few members who didn’t really make it. The ones who never got a real job, formed a serious relationship, accomplished anything to be proud of. If they happen to be our own kids, it makes us wonder what we did wrong … and usually, we have a sneaking suspicion that is wasn’t what we didn’t do that’s the problem.  It was that we did far too much.

I don’t think we should be mean and uncaring. I’m not that hypocritical, but I think it’s important to remember we didn’t get strong by being protected from every pain, every hurt. We didn’t get everything we wanted the moment we wanted it, or at least I certainly didn’t. If you got one really cool present for your birthday or Christmas, that was a big deal. Now, most kids get so much they don’t appreciate any of it.

So, in memory of the lives we lived … the good times, the bad times, the hard times, the great times. The schoolyard battles we fought and sometimes lost, the subjects we barely passed or actually failed and had to take again … the bullies who badgered us until we fought back and discovered that bullies are cowards. Getting cornered in the girls’ room by one of those toughs with a switch blade and wondering how you’re going to talk your way out of this one …

Being the only Jew, Black kid, Spanish kid or whatever kid in a school full of people who don’t like your kind … and getting through it and out the other side. Being the only one who used big words and read books when everyone else was watching American Bandstand. And finally, getting to college and discovering that the weirdos and rejects from high school were now the cool people to know … and magically, we were suddenly part of that group. No longer were we outsiders. The same stuff that had made us misfits were now the qualities that made us popular and eventually, successful.

The fifties and early sixties were not idyllic, especially if you weren’t a  middle class white Christian kid … but it was a great time to be a kid of any kind. Not because we had more stuff, but because we had more freedom, time to play, time to dream. Whatever we didn’t have in the way of “things,” we made up for by having far fewer rules and limitations. We could use our imaginations. We had to: we didn’t have video games and many of us were lucky if there was one crappy black and white television in the house with rabbit ears that barely managed to get a signal. We learned to survive and cope, and simultaneously, learned to achieve. We weren’t scared to try. We’d screwed up enough to know that if it didn’t work out, we’d get up, dust ourselves off, and try again.

When we got out into the world, for at least a couple of decades, we had a blast.

Here’s to us as we move past middle age. We really did have great lives.

18 thoughts on “I can’t believe we made it

  1. As U have suggested I am sending that link as a new comment, if possible check, thanks
    http://yourstoryclub.com/short-stories-social-moral/short-story-impressions/

  2. A nostalgic share and of course a good reminder!

    • I’m not big on the perfection of the past. It was far from … but there were values worth keeping and remembering too. We all (me especially, maybe) need to remember that there is a baby in the dirty bathwather. We did have a lot of freedom and we didn’t expect everything handed to us or to have mom or dad racing down to the school to fight our battles for us. It wasn’t easy, but life isn’t easy either, so perhaps we learned in childhood that we would need to fight for ourselves and that WAS good.

      • Yes, I see that…I too mean it was good! But times changes so also everything, with its pros and cons :-)
        By the way, would be glad if U could read my work Impressions

        • Gladly. Can you send me a link? If you send your link to me as a NEW comment and not as a reply, I’ll get it.

          I didn’t mean you thought it was too good … I was responding not so much to what YOU said as to all those stupid posts on Facebook about “the good old days” and all the parents who think the answer to every parently problem is to beat your kids. I’m not in favor of beating anyone. Call it spanking or something else; hitting kids teaches them that bullying is okay. Kids who are beaten at home are often bullies at school. They’re just acting like dad!

        • I concur with what U said completely, I am against beating kids for the stress release of parents , but value wise, or say, emotions/relations wise it was better,(my opinion) have thought that in many instances, there were no great technologies at that time but there were greater and deeper bonds :-)

  3. You know in all my school days I can’t recall many bullies or weenies. Highschool was an all boys parochial variety. The nuns would KILL you for acting up, much less fighting. When I had my own family My son corrected a kid on his bus for standing up & raising hell. The kid called him out for a fight after school. He came to me asking for me to intervene. I told him I was proud of him for correcting the kid. I also explained that bravery required dealing with the consequences. He went to school and called the kid’s bluff. The kid backed down & Bret earned a lot of respect for standing up for himself. Lesson learned.

    Today’s weenies are he vandals stabbing tires, knocking heads off statues or stealing the money of a girl scout selling cookies. These punks have no pride, no “power” as the indian nations would say. They are slugs who deserve no quarter. We’ve raised a generation of bullies and I have no idea what went wrong. Maybe it’s the fact that we don’t raise kids anymore, their daycare centers & baby sitters do.

    • That’s probably a good recommendation for parochial schools. Unfortunately, the cost of these schools is now so high that they are not affordable. They used to be able to keep the price down because they had so many teaching nuns who didn’t get salaries and worked so hard. Now, there are not nearly enough nuns and school have to hire teachers on the free market.

      When we were growing up, parochial schools were cheap enough so most blue collar families could afford them … and many did. About half the kids I grew up with went to the local parachial school. Too bad it’s not a viable option for most families any more.

  4. REBLOG! Did you already have this when I sent you the email? The video makes it perfect! Thank you!

    • I was posted 24 hours earlier. Another friend of mine sent me the video the previous day.

      • Just another meant to be for the two of us! We crossed in cyberspace:>) Reading the words just does not do it justice like the video!

        • Agreed. As soon as I saw it, I said “Ahhh” … and it was so easy to write the piece to go with it … always a good sign. When it just flows, it usually means it’s “right.” My friend Tom doesn’t send very much stuff … like kind of almost never … so when he does, it’s usually worth my while to stop what I’m doing and take a look!

  5. Reblogged this on catnipoflife and commented:
    ITS THE TRUTH and WE SURVIVED! I know because I am one of them, are you?
    If you were born 1930 – 1979. . .

    ITS THE TRUTH and WE SURVIVED!

    Born 1930 – 1979

  6. Looks like you found photo of police man helping me with my clothing. Always had problems with those buttons, zippers and galoshes. Ah, yes, I remember it well!!

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