Memories & Nostalgia

Life Lived Simply in the ’50’s, ’60’s & ’70’s

Archive for October, 2008

Shoe Memories - PF Flyers, US KEDS, Buster Brown

Published by admin under Cloths and Shoes on October 25, 2008

It’s funny that something as simple as shoes and sneakers can bring back memories, but they do. Just like labeling is important now, it was back then, too. I can remember looking at the heal of my sneaker at the little blue square logo that said KEDS and being so proud, because that meant I had the real thing, not some no-name imitation. (And to think of the “no name imitations” that my children have had to put up with having a penny-pincher for a Mom)  null

I can also remember feeling like I really could run a lot faster if I was wearing PF Flyers, or my KEDS.

But then there were my Buster Browns shoes.  I have to admit that I didn’t think those were as fun…I had to wear corrective shoes for a little while, those were the Buster Brown days, even though they were a good brand, and looking back at me from the insole was Buster Brown and his bug-eyed pooch, Tiger, they were clunky things, and weren’t nearly as free and fun as my sneakers.  Something I didn’t realize back then was that Buster Brown was based on a comic book series from the early 1900’s.

Here’s to memories from something as simple as a shoe.


A Different Way to Go to Church

Published by admin under Church on October 15, 2008

I’ve shared with you in past posts, one fairly recently, that my family was a church-going family.  But our faith was more than just going to church on Sunday, it was a way of life, no, it was even more than that, it was all about relationship…relationship with God through Jesus Christ.  I know that’s a statement that needs some explaining, but I think some of you understand.

I attended all kinds of churches as I was growing up, my only requirement was that they taught the Bible, God’s Word.  Denomination wasn’t necessarily important to me, but the content of the sermons and the quality of the fellowship was.

While I can’t say that I’ve ever attended a church in a theatre, I have attended events in large settings, for example in concert halls.  The thought of using a theatre as a church setting is something that is being considered, and there is something in the works to promote the idea. Find out more here, if you like.

What do I think of the idea? Any way that God be presented to people, as long as it is teaching from the Bible, is fine with me, whether it be a small home church, to a church in a meeting place as large as a theatre. God meets people and changes their lives in many different settings. The first-ever inaugural Theatre Church Conference will be taking place in Silver Spring, MD on October 22 & 23. Find out more and let me know what you think in a comment.


Remembering When Kids Were Tough and More

Published by admin under Children, Movies, Simple Pleasures, TV Show Memory on October 9, 2008

My friend, the amazingly talented “Pop Art Diva“, who happens to pop in here now and then to post a comment, sent the following link along in her last newsletter, it’s great!!

View it, and if you grew up in the 40’s, 50’s, or part of the 60’s, you’ll enjoy! Sign up for the newsletter at the end to catch up with what has happened to who and more from days gone by.

THE “REMEMBER WHEN” MOVIE


A Tribute to My Mom

Published by admin under Birthdays, Brothers, Gardening, Mom, Simple Pleasures on October 6, 2008

Yesterday we had the family here at our home to celebrate and honor my Mother on her on her 80th birthday with food, fun and a lot of love. My brother said it best when he stated that “80 years ago today, on October 5th, 1928, the world became a better place because you were born”.

Before I get sentimental, and share some of the wonderful things about my Mom, let me share a few things things that happened the year of her birth:

  • March - Movie “Legion of the Condemned” with Gary Cooper opened on the 10th; there was record trading on Wall Street for the time on the 28th
  • May - the Electron Microscope was invented; Shakespear’s “The Tempest” opens on Broadway; General Electric starts a regular schedule of television programs out of WGY in Schenectady, NY
  • June - Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly across the Atlantic Ocean.
  • July - Television sets go on sale for the first time; Warner Brothers releases the first feature length talking movie “The Lights of New York”
  • September - Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin
  • October - Joseph Stalin’s 5 year plan is announced; the German Graf Zeppelin dirigible comes to Lakehurst, NJ. BUT BEST EVENT OF ALL, my Mom is born.
  • November - Herbert Hoover is elected as President; Walt Disney’s “Steamboat Willy”, the first synchronized cartoon with Mickey Mouse in the “Star” role, opens at the Colony Theatre in New York City.
  • December -Boulder Dam Act approved by U.S. Congress, approving the construction of the dam in Nevada.

There’s just a bit of the history of the year of her birth, but let me tell you some of the things that I remember about my Mom that make her very special to me:

  • She is a woman of exceptionally strong faith.
  • I don’t remember a night in my childhood when she didn’t come in and pray with my brothers, sister and I before we went to bed, no matter how long the day had been or how tired she was.
  • Mom is strong, yet gentle.
  • She loves to garden, and still does, and always has something starting under her special plant lights.
  • She had the challenge of raising a multiply-disabled son right up until a few months ago when he moved into a group home.  He was born when I was 12, with a brother and sister between he and I.  It took some maturing on my part, a lot of it, to realize how hard it must have been to divide her attention among all of us when she was faced with such a challenge.
  • It was at my bedside after going to Vacation Bible School when I was just a toddler that I prayed with my Mom to receive Jesus Christ as my personal Lord and Savior.   I have found that I am never too old to learn some nugget of spiritual truth from my mother.
  • Mom has always loved feeding birds, and has always had a feeder full of seeds…or when we were young, a tray that we would fill and lay out in the yard, and watch as Mom identified each bird.  When the Grackles were migrating by the hundreds, I remember her going out once with a LOT of bread, breaking it, and throwing it, and it was gone before much of it had a chance to hit the ground.  Thanks to her, I, too, always have a feeder full of seeds hanging outside.
  • Mom never had a drivers license, and thanks to my father’s income and careful management of money, was able to stay at home and care for her children.
  • During the last 5 years of my father’s life, years in which he was taken from Mom and all of us due to a series of small strokes, Mom sacrificed herself and her back bending over him to care for him; helping him to and from wheel chair to bed; taking care of his personal needs…yes, we did have help come in, but Mom did a lot. Dad passed 11 days after her birthday a few years ago…her words when I brought her into the room after he had passed (a phone call kept her from his bedside) were “my lover is gone”.
  • Mom loves cats, she went from a woman who shot at them with a super-soaker when they came in the yard to stalk her birds at the feeder, to the owner of a series of cats, 3 of which she has today.
  • Mom allowed us to explore the world around us, allowing me to keep all sorts of creatures in cages, jars and aquariums in my room as long as I took good care of them, and allowing my brother to study creatures smaller than the eye can see at a young age through a microscope, which I am sure is the foundation for his being the Scientist he is today.

I could go on and on, she deserves so many accolades, and I don’t know how to put my love for her into words.  She is a treasure beyond words! I love you, Mom.


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