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Growing Up in the North in the '60s

Growing up in the North of England in the 1960s wasn’t glamorous, and it certainly wasn’t part of the "Swinging Sixties" you often hear about on the telly. We weren’t out in mini skirts or dancing in Carnaby Street — life was a lot more down to earth where I was.

Things were harder then. Money didn’t always stretch far, so we made do. Clothes were handed down or repaired, not thrown away. If your jumper had a hole, your mum stitched it. Nothing was wasted, and everything had value. My mum was a great one for keeping stuff like empty boxes, in case they had a use, bits of string, anything really.

We did have closeness — to our families, our neighbours, and our communities. Kids played out in the street till the sun went down, and no one had their nose in a screen all day. Life was slower. Simpler.

It might’ve been tougher in some ways, but it was rich in things that matter. You didn’t have much, but you weren’t alone so there was more of a closeness.

Having said all that I am glad I don't live there any more.
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hippyjoe1955 · 70-79, M
I grew up in Western Canada and had similar experiences. We would get one new set of clothes every year from a mail order catalogue. Rugged clothes that stood the test of time. Lots of hard work for the entire family. We lived on a farm/ranch and raised most of our own food. As kids we would help with the gardening and raising animals. I learned how to ride and drive horses at a young age then moved on to driving trucks and tractors before I was a teenager. My older cousin recalls that when she was 6 our grandfather (both her parents were dead) put her on the back of a saddle pony and sent them off to school. The school was a couple of miles away but imagine being a 6 year old girl riding your own horse to school with no older brothers or sisters to guide you.