Marko I remember those DDT spray trucks too.
Brian. Lover of SE razors.
(09-04-2018, 07:35 PM)Marko Wrote:(09-04-2018, 01:16 AM)yohannrjm Wrote:(09-03-2018, 05:03 PM)Marko Wrote: That sounds like an idyllic childhood yohannrjm . We don't have communities like that anymore at least not around here.
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I also remember all the time and effort we used to put into making mix tapes - you didn't just mash together anything. Now with things like iTunes and genius nobody has to even think about mix tapes. Too bad.
My childhood was pretty idyllic by today's standards, but it wasn't all sunshine and roses. Tight communities come with issues of their own. However, with all its flaws, I'll take my childhood over what my kids have to deal with now.
Mix tapes were a big part of growing up. I remember choosing the track listing carefully and then spending evenings over at my friends homes making copies onto Philips and Memorex tapes. It was also a bit of a thing during courtship in my community. I remember making a couple of tapes for various girls I was interested in.
That tradition carried on with me and I made a mix CD or two for my wife when we were dating. She still has them, though she's never warmed up to Tom Waits. She made one for me too, which I still listen to.
How could she not like Tom Waits?? Seriously though, a lot of time and thought went into those mix tapes. Some people were renowned for being masters of the mix tape. They probably went on to become DJs.
Its true that we tend to filter out the negative when reminiscing about the past - I can recall those hot summer days when a gang of us neighbourhood kids would run down the street in the cool mist of the DDT fog that the City used to spray on the trees. They just drove trucks up and down the streets fogging the trees, and us kids running behind too and anything else that got in the way with toxic pesticide . And they wonder why cancer rates are so high.