Going Back to School: The 1970s vs Today

Hat tip Avalon
Guest Post by Victoria Fedden

livermoreclasspics.org

Back to School, 1970s:

1. Take the kids downtown to go shopping at Sears for back to school clothes the last week of August. Get everyone a new pair of corduroys and a striped tee shirt. Buy the boys a pair of dungarees and the girls a pair of culottes. No, Jennifer, you can’t have that orange and red poncho. Promise you will crochet her a better one with much more fringe. Get the girls a package of that rainbow, fuzzy yarn they like in their hair. You are done. You have spent a total of $43.00. Now take everyone to the Woolworth’s lunch counter for grilled cheeses and chocolate milk.

2. On the night before the first day of school (that would be the Sunday night after Labor Day, of course, you know, mid-September) throw the kids in the way back of the station wagon and drag them downtown to Eckerds, K-Mart, Ames, Dollar General, Drug Fair or the like and hurry them over to the back-to-school area to pick out a lunchbox. Make sure to tell them get a move on because you don’t have all night for them to make a damn decision. They need to get in bed by eight and yes, they’re going to miss the Wonderful World of Disney if they can’t decide between The Fonz and Dukes of Hazzard. Good Lord, why is it so hard for them to pick? Tell Kimberly if she can’t make up her mind between Holly Hobbie and The Bionic Woman then you’re going to pick Pigs in Space and you don’t want to hear another word about it until June. Grab a composition book for each of them and a pack of pencils too. That’s all they need. Remember to save some grocery bags so they can cover their textbooks with them after the first day of school.

3. Buy yourself a pack of Virginia Slims on the way out and smoke three of them on the way home.

4. Get up in the morning and make yourself a cup of Sanka with Sweet ‘n’ Low. Line up all the lunchboxes on the formica counter top in your kitchen. Open up a bag of Wonder Bread and do this assembly line style.

5. Spread yellow mustard on bread. Slap bologna on bread. Unwrap American cheese slices and put on top of bologna. Put top on the sandwich and wrap sandwich in tin foil or wax paper. Put it in the lunchbox. Every kid gets the same exact lunch. Period.

6. Alternate sandwich choices could include: Peanut butter and grape jelly, peanut butter and marshmallow fluff, the end of last night’s leftover roast beef or the ever popular with children tuna fish with large chunks of onions and celery and Miracle Whip.

7. Put some Planter’s Cheese Balls into a baggie and close with a twist tie.

8. Take Twinkies out of the box. Put one in each child’s lunch box.

9. Fill thermoses with either Kool-Aid or whole milk.

10. Include a red delicious apple even though you know that damned apple is just going to come home uneaten again, which is fine because you can keep adding the same one until it practically rots.

11. Close the lunchboxes. You’re done. Go put some Barry Manilow on the record player and celebrate that your kids are out of the house until dinner time. They’ll grab them, along with a frosted, dutch apple Pop-Tart on the way out the door as they walk a half mile down the road to get to the bus stop.

via H&M

Back to School, 2014

1. Take five deep breaths and say a positive affirmation. School begins in two weeks. It is the middle of July. Don’t worry, you still have time to order BPA-free bento boxes and authentic Indian tiffins made with special stainless steel that did not involve any child-labor, sweat shops or animal cruelty. Remember, you have Amazon Prime. You can get the free two day shipping and you will have plenty of time to read reviews and make this very important decision because your kids are in summer “camp” which is actually just another word for school in the summer because OH MY GOD you were so tired that day you had to have them home all day with you and you couldn’t go to your restorative flow class at yoga. And that was also the day something went terribly wrong with the homemade glitter cloud dough recipe that was supposed to go in their sensory bin and the very same day that they were out of soy milk at Starbucks and you had to immediately email corporate to let them know that duh, they should actually be selling almond milk and/ or coconut milk. Get with it Starbucks. Soy is so 90s. Ugh, but you digress. The tiffin. The bento boxes…

2. One Week Later: The bento boxes and tiffins have arrived. So has your childrens’ school’s annual list of school supplies that you must purchase and deliver. It is three and a half pages long. It includes a ten pound bag of flour and several cleaning products and also requests a Costco-sized package of toilet paper.

3. Begin frantic online search for backpacks and school bags made from all natural materials yet still “cool.” Have them monogrammed.

4. Take kids shopping at the mall for new school clothes. Buy them each a completely new wardrobe from Gymboree and Crew Cuts. Spend $2,387.07 on your credit card.

5. Take children to the child psychologist to prepare them mentally for the difficult transition to a new grade, new teacher and new classroom.

6. Intently study the allergy list the school has sent you which lists all the items that other children in your children’s classes are allergic to and thus cannot be sent in your child’s lunch either. This is extremely stressful because the last thing you (or anyone) wants to be responsible for is sending a second grader into anaphylactic shock. Make notes on your phone so you can remember what not to buy when you go to Whole Foods.

7. Purchase school supplies for your children. Not to be confused with the 3 1/2 page list of classroom supplies you are also responsible for. They will need paper, pens, folders, notebooks, a calligraphy set, fifteen new apps for their tablets, a graphing calculator, a scalpel, an electron microscope and a centrifuge.

8. Go to Whole Foods to shop for school lunch items. This will take 4 hours and 15 minutes because you have to read every single label to make sure you are purchasing organic, locally sourced, non-GMO, gluten-free, allergy friendly products. You come home with tahini, bananas and a package of brown rice cakes. You somehow spent $76.19.

9. The night before the first day of school prepare the bento boxes. Fill containers with organic, local strawberries intricately cut into the shapes of sea creatures. Include homemade, nut-free granola made with certified gluten-free oats. Make a sandwich on vegan hemp bread out of tahini, kale and jicama. Form it into the shape of your child’s favorite Disney character. Make flowers out of non-dairy cheese slices, olives and seaweed. Photograph the finished Bento Box and post it to Instagram.

10. Write your child an encouraging note which includes an inspirational quote.

11. Include a sheet of stickers for good measure.

12. Fill a Siig bottle with filtered water and also include a box of chilled coconut water in the Bento Box because children can never be too hydrated. Ever.

13. Blog about this experience. Pray it goes viral and is picked up by HuffPo.

14. Get up at 4AM on the first day of school. Make first day of school signs for each child to hold as you photograph them on the front step. Make a bunting to hang above the front door. Blow up balloons. Actually, go ahead and make a full on back to school photo booth.

15. Make pancakes in the shape of the letters of the alphabet.

16. Dress kids in coordinated outfits and spend 35 minutes posing and photographing them (with your phone).

17. Load everyone into the car to drive them to school.

18. When they are safely in their new classrooms, return to your car to cry for the next 20 minutes. But it’s okay, really. You’ll be back in six hours to pick them up and drive them to Synchronized Swimming, Cello and Urdu classes this afternoon.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
20 Comments
John Angelo
John Angelo
July 29, 2015 11:44 am

I grew up during the 80s and was the last high school class of the 90s. My experience was thankfully very similar to the author’s 70s depiction. I see many of my friends today put a lot of pressure on themselves to be “social media appropriate.” They stress out in an attempt to live a life worthy of Pinterest and Instagram. It’s vanity on a new level, fueled in no small part by celebrity culture, endless entertainment, and the California lifestyle. Of all the periods in American history since the industrial revolution I hope society, years from now, looks upon the early 21st century with bewilderment and asks what everyone was thinking. I look at our financial situation and “new morality” and ask that question on a daily basis.

Stucky
Stucky
July 29, 2015 11:48 am

“Get everyone a new pair of corduroys …. now take everyone to the Woolworth’s lunch counter for grilled cheeses and chocolate milk.” ——- article

Yeah, baby, that’s EXACTLY what my mom did.

TERRIFIC article, from the first paragraph to the very last.

Stucky
Stucky
July 29, 2015 12:08 pm

What is the result of these two different eras?

In the 1970’s … boys who knew they were boys, and liked pussy
[imgcomment image[/img]

Today … boys who ARE pussies
[imgcomment image[/img]

AC
AC
July 29, 2015 12:08 pm

So, no time ‘scheduled’ for the kids to be kids? Perhaps we have stumbled across one of the root causes of our growing societal ills?

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
July 29, 2015 12:24 pm

#8. Go to Wholefoods to get items for lunch. (organic)

Save your time going to Whole Paycheck for yummy organic lunch items for the kiddies. You can get the same shit with the REAL company label on it at the regular grocery in your area without paying for the pseudo organic healthy label.

The simple life needs to make a comeback like “mood Rings”.

starfcker
starfcker
July 29, 2015 12:57 pm

That young man is no pussy. He’s got a miami beach t shirt, for christ sake

Bostonbob
Bostonbob
July 29, 2015 1:05 pm

Very much like when I went to school in the 60s and 70s except I had a Combat lunchbox and mom shopped at Quincy Bargain Basement center with me and my three brothers. She would spend about $200 on all four of us and fill in the rest with the hand me down closet at the back of the bathroom. I loved getting new socks, but I always felt new shoes were a waste, but mom insisted on dressing up for church. I was always and still am a big tuna guy. Tuna sandwich is in my lunchbox today on the job site.
Bob.

Aquapura
Aquapura
July 29, 2015 2:27 pm

“New” clothes for back-to-school?! Shit, I got hand me downs and I was the oldest. Yes, my mother made friends that had older children so I could wear their tired old shit clothes. Didn’t matter since I didn’t really give two shits about what I was wearing until I was in senior high. BTW, that was 1980’s into the early 90’s time frame.

When in high school and I wanted “cool” clothes I had to buy them with my own $$$. Wasn’t a problem because I worked as a kid since I was 10 years old. Mowing lawns all summer was easy cash. When I turned 14 I got a “real” job bagging groceries. $4.25/hour and I was happy to have it. A $50 pair of jeans took me about 14-15 hours after taxes. I didn’t buy more than one pair and it lasted all fuckin’ year.

Don’t remember lunch too well, it probably sucked. Wish I still had those bad assed metal lunch boxes. I usually destroyed those by November and was relegated to the brown bag.

Still don’t buy designer clothing and very rarely spend good $ going out to eat for lunch. Hmmm.

James Wentz
James Wentz
July 29, 2015 5:21 pm

I grew up in a small corn town, they laughed at our high school baseball field, because if they hit a home run too far, the ball got lost in the cornfield next to it. Our FFA had a skeet shooting team who would bring shotguns to school every week to go to practice. I remember the principal walked by the parking lot and one of the students told him that he got a new shotgun. The principal asked to see it, checked to see it wasn’t loaded, pointed it to the sky and looked down the tube. He gave it back and said, that’s a nice shotgun. The kid put it back in his trunk and that was it. No one thought anything about a shotgun in a car in the parking lot. Those times are gone forever.

The 1970’s was a good time to grow up, Nam was over and no draft. Good music, lots of jobs, etc… Sometimes, I miss them a lot!

ZombieDawg
ZombieDawg
July 29, 2015 7:58 pm

You forgot the obligatory humongous fuel guzzling 4WD, bought on a $50k 2nd mortgage in a futile effort for old farts to somehow recapture lost youth by running the kids 3 blocks to school and going shopping in.

taxSlave
taxSlave
July 29, 2015 8:35 pm

Fuck lunch boxes.

I bought lunch with 30 cents. And it was good,

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
July 29, 2015 8:58 pm

I grew up mainly in the 1970’s and one staple that was ALWAYS in the kitchen was a bag of potatoes. Can you imagine if parents today had to figure out how and then actually cook potatoes to help feed the youngins? Anytime I’m in the grocery and see a woman buying a family-size bag of potatoes I always say to myself, ” Now that’s a real mommy and one hell of a woman!”

geo3
geo3
July 29, 2015 9:29 pm

The local office supply store would have manila envelopes with the required supplies for each grade. Books were free, assigned by the school. Dress code just made sure of no jeans and shirt tails that were tucked in. Had a GunSmoke lunch box with an apricot jam sandwich. Glass thermos bottles had a short life span.

Life was good

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
July 29, 2015 10:27 pm

Stucky says:

“Get everyone a new pair of corduroys …. now take everyone to the Woolworth’s lunch counter for grilled cheeses and chocolate milk.” ——- article

Yeah, baby, that’s EXACTLY what my mom did.

TERRIFIC article, from the first paragraph to the very last.
_____________________________________

Corduroys are sixties, not seventies. They went with paisley print shirts and dickeys. WTF is wrong with your memory?

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
July 29, 2015 10:28 pm

…now all the millenials will be googling “dickey.”

Stucky
Stucky
July 29, 2015 10:46 pm

Zara

So, you’re saying the corduroy suit I bought a few months ago is already out of style??

Blow me.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
July 29, 2015 10:57 pm

Stucky says:

Zara

So, you’re saying the corduroy suit I bought a few months ago is already out of style??

Blow me.
_________________________________

WTF do you need a suit for?

SSS
SSS
July 30, 2015 12:20 am

Fun article. I’d nominate that author as Secretary of Edumacation.

“8. Go to Whole Foods to shop for school lunch items. This will take 4 hours and 15 minutes because you have to read every single label to make sure you are purchasing organic, locally sourced, non-GMO, gluten-free, allergy friendly products. You come home with tahini, bananas and a package of brown rice cakes. You somehow spent $76.19.”
—-from the article on “Today”

Damn, that sounds like so much fun, doesn’t it, you anti-GMO food Nazis that infect this site?

Time to munch on some GMO Doritos.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
July 30, 2015 12:40 am

SSS says: …you anti-GMO food Nazis that infect this site?

Why do old school TBPers insist on keeping this site lily-white? Have you not heard of diversity and judging everyone by his/her strengths instead of their weakness for man-flesh or stolen goods?

Stucky
Stucky
July 30, 2015 2:25 am

“WTF do you need a suit for?” ——- Zara

AT my age …. baptisms (our kids having kids) ….. and, funerals (our friends kicking the bucket).