It is an American television news magazine that has been broadcast on ABC since June 6, 1978. People are now giggling about the way Barbara said 20/20.
That's true because our mothers set the example of what a wife is. I followed my mothers example and wish I hadn't because my mother worshiped her husband. She bought him every car he ever wanted, diamond ring for anniversary. She gave him more food than her children. She bought the good candy bars and hid them in her bedroom from her children. She made sure he had the best of everything over everybody else. She made sure when he walked in the door from a days work that dinner would be ready in 5 minutes of him coming in the door.
And I tried to do the same thing when I got married and he did expect it.
And after my divorce I was way too generous with men.
I also wore hand me down clothes. My daughter was born in 1964. I didn't know there was such a thing as disposable diapers so I soaked her diapers in a pail of bleach for a couple days before I washed them and hung them outside on a clothesline.
I agree that it's a good idea to be done with plastic bags in grocery stores. I see people using cloth bags to carry groceries in now but it will take a very long time before it becomes nationwide.
People will still use plastic bags for their sandwich, to carry makeup, to put food in the fridge. They will still use a 30 gallon plastic bag in their garbage can. When I was a kid we had a steel garbage can that didn't have a plastic bag in it. It held all the disgusting garbage right there in the can.
It means...............I remember when blah blah blah
Your profile says you are 39 years old so you can't go back in the day as far as I did (in the post above you) but there must be something you can think of that is very different now from when you were a young boy.
I remember taking soda bottles back to the store in my little red wagon to get two cents refund on each bottle.
The milk man delivered milk in glass bottles which we returned to him when he delivered the next supply of milk.
I used brown paper bags to cover my school books. How else could I doodle the word "love" and the name of the boy I was dreaming about with hearts and arrows.
Frozen vegetables were too expensive for my family so we had a huge garden where we grew corn, green beans, tomatoes, kohlrabi, carrots and eggplant.
We had a stove in the kitchen that burned firewood to get heat for the house. Later on we had a coal burning furnace with a very big pile of coal right there in the basement. I remember shoveling coal into that furnace.
We had a wringer washing machine like the one in my picture for washing clothes. Then we hanged them outside to dry.
My parents didn't have a telephone until after I was married which was when I was 20 years old. My boyfriend and my father worked at the same place so I wrote (handwritten) letters to him and my father would deliver it to my boyfriend and he wrote a letter that my father brought home to me.
In 1969, Clapton fell in love with Pattie Boyd, the wife of one of his best friends, Beatles' George Harrison. ... With the help of percussionist Jim Gordon, Clapton wrote a song based on his reaction to the story and called it "Layla." He hoped its message would convince Boyd to leave her husband for him.
Clapton originally wrote "Layla" as a ballad, with lyrics describing his unrequited love for Boyd, but the song became a "rocker" when, according to Clapton, Allman composed the song's signature riff.
Clapton was trying to lure her away from her husband, with whom he was good mates. ... Layla was inspired by a book Clapton had been reading, The Story Of Layla And Majnun, the 12th-century tale of an Arabian princess whose father marries her off, leaving her true love in despair that turns to madness.
RE: Last to post wins
You don't share. You not winnin