Where has the time gone?

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

Karlon

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2023
2,701
1,235
113
#21
I miss customer service.
When you bought groceries, they bagged them and carried them to your car.
When you bought gas, they put it in, washed your windshield , checked your oil and only charged you 25 cents a gal.
No matter where you shopped, there were always people there to help you with a smile on their face.
I think I just showed everyone how old I am.
so you remember the 5 cent candy bar & the 10 cent soda!!! i can remember the 4 cent candy bar when they were old!!!
 

Karlon

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2023
2,701
1,235
113
#22
Oh yes, my parents had us aware of certain things at a young age. I was very aware if I said a bad word, I'd get soap......a used bar. I didn't mess up after that one time I tell ya lol.
we also endured the soap treatment by having to stand in a corner for a half hour & chew on soap!
 

ForgiveMeGod

Active member
Nov 11, 2024
755
239
43
#23
I miss sleep overs, renting video games from blockbuster, creating entire all day stories with action figures, surge soda, ravens revenge powder candy, bubble gum cigarettes, chasing the ice cream man down the street, hide and go seek, neighborhood laser tag, airsoft wars, being great at sports, being able to ride a bicycle for 40 miles, going on vacations with friends families, going to the roller rink, drawing every day, building things with legos, collecting ninja turtles and power rangers, being really into dinosaurs, collecting Pokémon cards, actually enjoying video games, having my sisters Barbie’s be my action figures girlfriends, going to the movie theater with friends and family, going to arcades, playing mini golf, feeling like my dad was my father.

The only cartoons I miss are probably looney toons, Tom & Jerry, ren & stimpy, beavis and butthead, and this is not a cartoon but celebrity death match.
 

seoulsearch

OutWrite Trouble
May 23, 2009
16,707
5,617
113
#24
When you bought gas, they put it in, washed your windshield , checked your oil and only charged you 25 cents a gallo.
so you remember the 5 cent candy bar & the 10 cent soda!!! i can remember the 4 cent candy bar when they were old!!!
What were the corresponding wages at those times?

I had a grandpa whose family didn't get electricity in their house or an automobile until he was in high school. He was talking about gas being 5 cents a gallon.

I asked him what the wages were like then, and he said a "good wage" (picking apples, as he was a farmer,) was $2 a day.

I'm not sure -- and I should have asked -- but I believe the hours worked were from sunrise to sunset, as that's what farmers work, and then some.

When the "good old days" are mentioned, people always talk about the prices then, which is neat to hear about -- but I'm more interested in what went along with those prices.

What were people being paid, how long did they have to work, and what were their working conditions like?
 

Karlon

Well-known member
Mar 8, 2023
2,701
1,235
113
#25
What were the corresponding wages at those times?

I had a grandpa whose family didn't get electricity in their house or an automobile until he was in high school. He was talking about gas being 5 cents a gallon.

I asked him what the wages were like then, and he said a "good wage" (picking apples, as he was a farmer,) was $2 a day.

I'm not sure -- and I should have asked -- but I believe the hours worked were from sunrise to sunset, as that's what farmers work, and then some.

When the "good old days" are mentioned, people always talk about the prices then, which is neat to hear about -- but I'm more interested in what went along with those prices.

What were people being paid, how long did they have to work, and what were their working conditions like?
in about 1967, in New York, minimum wage was around $1.35 per hour. so a factory worker on a 40 hour week earned $54 a week, gross income. basically, back then a single person could have supported him or herself living in an apartment. you wouldn't have been rich but you could support yourself. i remember rents in that time about $25 to $35 a month. everything was much more balanced out concerning cost of living. even in the 40's in america, it was a rare thing that someone didn't have electricity. i'll tell you a story my grandfather told us; when he was young, in the 19 teens to early 1920's, he would take his girlfriend out on a Sunday, with a dollar. he would get 10 gallons of gas for 90 cents, that's 9 cents per gallon, drive around the countryside, have a dime left over & buy 2 huge ice cream cones for 5 cents apiece! working sunrise to sunset was very common, especially if you were a farmer. once, i remember, a grocery store was closing in about 1969, an old "mom & pop" store, usually on a corner, & they had a "half off" sale. my dad purchased 5 full bags of groceries for $8.23!
 

DRobinson

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2023
574
295
63
#26
What were the corresponding wages at those times?

I had a grandpa whose family didn't get electricity in their house or an automobile until he was in high school. He was talking about gas being 5 cents a gallon.

I asked him what the wages were like then, and he said a "good wage" (picking apples, as he was a farmer,) was $2 a day.

I'm not sure -- and I should have asked -- but I believe the hours worked were from sunrise to sunset, as that's what farmers work, and then some.

When the "good old days" are mentioned, people always talk about the prices then, which is neat to hear about -- but I'm more interested in what went along with those prices.

What were people being paid, how long did they have to work, and what were their working conditions like?
Minimum wage was $1,00 per hour but was making $3.28 per hour.
The point I was making was customer service has disappeared with higher prices.
 

seoulsearch

OutWrite Trouble
May 23, 2009
16,707
5,617
113
#27
Minimum wage was $1,00 per hour but was making $3.28 per hour.
The point I was making was customer service has disappeared with higher prices.
Yes, I understand.

I worked in stores for many years and ours was one of the very few left that still bagged and carried people's groceries out to their vehicles for them -- it was offered to everyone and tipping was not allowed.

It was all part of the service.