Memoir Monday week 14 How is life different today compared to when you were a child?

in #hive-1063166 months ago

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This is my post for #memoirmonday week 14 How is life different today compared to when you were a child? hosted by @ericvancewalton

The above photo is of my brother who was 2 years older than me and my Dad. One thing that is different now is a woman can find out what sex their child will be, back then they had to wait until after the child was born Jimbo was my Mom's first child but he was my Dad's third. Another thing was women did not have baby showers like they have today, people would bring a gift after the baby was born but not have the party with games beforehand.
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I was one year old and living with only a generator for electricity, we did not get electricity from the power company until I was 7 or 8 years old. With never having it, I did not know what I was missing. Dad used the generator to run electricity in the Bar he owned. It was a struggle to get him up on Saturday mornings to start the generator so we could watch cartoons. We had a black and white TV, I remember when we got our first colored TV but I do not know what age I was. The TV had 3 channels and went off the air every night. We had an antenna that had to be turned to get a different channel. One child would turn the antenna while one stood at the window and one at the TV. The one at the TV would yell better or worse to the one at the window and the one at the window would yell the same to the one turning the antenna. Also, there was no remote control, we had to get up and walk over to the TV to change the channel.

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Me and my brother in a boat. Children did not have to wear life jackets like they are required to wear nowadays. When we were in a car we did not have to be in a car seat or when older we did not have to wear a seatbelt. No one had to wear seatbelts.

We would run behind the mosquito truck that was pumping out a thick white fog of DDT and no one thought it was harmful, it was so thick that we could not see each other while in it. I think every kid in Florida did this. Today the mosquito trucks spray a fine clear mist.

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We ate sea turtles, today they will lock you up if you even look at one wrong. We ate gators, now you have to enter a lottery to get a permit so you can go with a paid gator hunter. There is no more going out on your own to get one to eat, of course, the lottery will cost you and you have to pay the guide.

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After watching the big female turtles lay their eggs, we would ride them back to the edge of the ocean, today this will also get you locked up.

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Most people in my area had beach buggies that they rode on the beach, sometime in the 1960s they banned them from the beach in my area.

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The schools were segregated, white kids went to one school and black kids went to another school. I remember when we were told to go to each other's school, the black kids did not want us in their school and we did not want them in ours, because of this many fights broke out, and my Dad took us out of public school. Girls had to wear dresses to school. I am on the left in front of the boy with the white shoes.

It is hard to believe that because of the color of your skin, you did not have the same rights as members of my family, Black people could not use a white restroom, they could not drink from the same water fountain, or even vote.

The Confederate flag did not stand for racism, it was the Southern flag, and that is all it meant, if you were black or white you were proud to be from the South and fly the flag.

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You did not have to have a license to catch a fish or to sell one, now you do and now we have to fill out trip tickets on where the fish was caught, what the air temp and water temp were, how long we fished, the size of the fish, how many pounds, our license number and our boat number. There is no more gillnetting of fish, which is what my town was built from.The picture is of my husband setting his net.

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There was no closed season or size limit on snook, people did not eat them until they learned to skin them, the skin is full of iodine. Now they are closed to commercial fishermen, we can not have one on our boat even when the season is open. The sports can keep one a day but it has to be between 28 and 32 inches, a 4 inch slot.

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Last year they made redfish catch and release only, when I was a child there was no size limit, and like snook, the commercial fisherman could keep them, but not now.
There are now size limits and closed seasons on just about all fish,

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The river had huge oyster beds, clams filled the bottom, it was full of life, and it had seagrass flats and mangrove swamps where juvenile fish stayed until they were big enough to venture out into the open river. Man diked off the mangrove swamps to build mosquito impoundments. There were rock bottom coves that also helped the small fish, they were filled in so roads could be built over them. The river was a brackish water lagoon, not really a river, an inlet was dug changing the salinity. The last thing they did killed the river, they stopped the fresh water from flowing into it, saying it was polluted, it might have been but it was not hurting the river. When they stopped the freshwater the river became saltier than the ocean water and huge algae blooms were created, killing thousands of fish, birds, manatees, dolphins and the seagrass. My theory is the State of Florida needs the freshwater for all of these new developments that are being built, they treat the water and sell it back to the homeowners. I know for a fact that at first, they were creating the algae blooms. They would hold the freshwater back until the salinity in the river became high, then they would release it all at once and the blooms would form killing the fish. People would see the river being clear then seeing all of this red water and the state got the news to report how the freshwater was polluted and killing the river. It is like having a saltwater fishtank and dumping a bunch of freshwater in it, the same thing will happen and your fish will die. They did the same thing in Miami in the 1930s, Biscayne Bay was full of life and seagrass like here, they built dikes and stopped the freshwater, there is no seagrass left in Biscayne Bay, when I talk about seagrass I am talking about what we called mullet grass, it grew long and thick and was a good hiding place for fish, it only grows in brackish water. Sorry about getting on a rant about the river but it is a huge difference now.

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One of the biggest things that has changed and I think it is my generation's fault is family get togethers. Every Sunday Dad would load us in the car and make the drive to Grandma's house, once there we would play with our cousins outside while the grown ups visited in the house, and we would have Sunday dinner with her. I took my kids to visit with my mom or Dad but we did not have dinner and it was not once a week, sometimes it was not even once a month. It was a huge part of my childhood that I enjoyed and now wish I would have done the same.

Of course, we had no internet, no cell phones, and no cable TV. We did not have air conditioners in our home. We played outside, kids were not allowed to stay in the house all day, and when we were thirsty, we drank from the water hose.
photos are mine

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Facebook shared this one, tried to tag my mom - she grew up on a river. At 18, she married onto a farm, and never again got to live with a river in sight or hearing. Now in her 80s. She would love you, @myjob.

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I feel sad for your Mom, I hope one day she gets to see it again. When I was 15 my Dad moved us from Fl to Missouri, my heart cried for the river and ocean, it took me 7 years to get back.

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It's sad how much greed has seeped into almost every aspect of our society. We have more regulations but the environment seems worse off because of it. It made me sad to hear how much Florida has changed. My parents lived in the Rockledge area for about eight years and loved it down there. My dad would go to the beach almost every week.

Rockledge is not far from me, I am in Sebastian. Florida is all about tourism not about saving the environment, it makes me sick. My grandparents moved here in the 1890s and I wonder what they would think of it now.

I know exactly where Sebastian is! What a small world. My parents lived in an older 55+ community with a bunch of former NASA employees. I feel like I got a good sense of what “old Florida” was like before Disney descended into there and everything changed from talking to them. I bet it was an amazing place to live back then.

Yes, it was a beautiful place to live. Did you ever go to Sebastian Inlet State Park, that is where I grew up before the State took it, my Dad started the campground on the south side, but he was only leasing the land from the county. I spent the first 15 years of my life there.

I think I've been near there, for sure. My wife came down there when my parents lived in Rockledge and stayed in a little beachside hotel. So did the State seize the land through imminent domain or did they pay a fair market price to the county? Many times in situations like that the owners get nothing or next to nothing. Very sad. Do you ever visit the park?

I believe they paid the county, I remember asking Dad why we had to move and he told me whatever he bid, the state would bid a dollar higher, that is why I think they bought it.

I live directly across the river from it. When my brother was alive and he came down he would camp there, it is nothing like it used to be, where our house was is now a parking lot.

Sunday dinners with the grandparents.
Getting there in big heavy-metal cars with no seat belts.
No VCR, no color TV, no CDs, just 45 rpm records that got scratched, oops, pray your sister doesn't find out it was you playing her record when she was away...

What a comprehensive and wonderful reflection on life in the 1900s!
"Go easy on me. I'm from the 1900s." Comedian Nate Bargatze said something to that effect.
I'm appropriating it.
As I drink from the garden hose and line-dry laundry, barefoot.

I think you have me confused with someone else's post, I was not playing my sister's records, and the line-dry laundry, barefoot is true but I did not write about it.

Your stories of what has changed are always riveting for me. So much! And often the changes are for the worse for just about everyone except for those with money to demand the changes so that they can live like they see on TV, or have been told is a good way to live. You had so many cool adventures! Rant on. I like your rants.

Thank you for your awesome comments, you always know how to make me smile. It is true, change is never good for us or nature.

Natural change would be good for all of us, if consumerism were not the game most of us play now. Flux is natural. TPTB try to eradicate anything that refuses to do as it's told.

Nature changing this is one thing, man changing things is bad.
I had to look up tptb, this is what I got "Let every soul submit himself unto the authority of the higher powers. There is no power but of God. The powers that be, are ordained of God".

oh! That's not what I meant! Good to know. I think of the powers that be to be quite contrary to anything ordained by God, even though some of them claim to be just that, like zionists. Hold on. Maybe they are the same thing, since zionists seem very much to be the ultimate powers that be on the planet today.