I grew up in the country - we knew where every readily available faucet was in several square miles. "Readily available" meaning it was close to the road so we didn't have to go into somebody's yard. We always made sure to turn them off after drinking too.
I lived outside of town about 10 miles. So we didn't have others to run around with. So no friends or sleep overs. But I had knives, guns, drove tractors, and broke horses.
I remember breaking a mule to ride with my dad. He was on the horse, I was on the mule, and he ran a hobble. Every time it tried to buck me off, he pulled the rope to trip it a little. I got tossed off of my share of horses.
I was driving tractors and heavy machinery on the farm for 10-12 hours and hauling grain wagons to town. The age limit was when you were big enough to reach the pedals comfortably.
So we were very responsible at an early age. At 10 years old we could outwork most people today.
Even as a child of the 80’s, I can relate to much of that video.
I grew up in the country - we knew where every readily available faucet was in several square miles. "Readily available" meaning it was close to the road so we didn't have to go into somebody's yard. We always made sure to turn them off after drinking too.
I grew up in the country - we knew where every readily available faucet was in several square miles. "Readily available" meaning it was close to the road so we didn't have to go into somebody's yard. We always made sure to turn them off after drinking too.
As a child of the 70s and 80s i see computers as the downfall of society