by WildRose » Thu 05 Jul 2007, 22:21:07
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('I_Like_Plants', 'T')hey were far richer and better fed than I was as a 1970s kid, it's takene me years to realize they were supposed to be poor. I'd say 80% of American kids are growing up with less human feelings, security, regular nutritious food, etc than the Waltons did. The other 20% come from families that own everything and like nowadays just fine.
I agree, Plants, there are plenty of kids growing up poor and undernourished in cities all over North America today. Their diets consist of more starch than anything else; lean protein and fresh produce are scarce. They do not have the benefit of a great garden. Not only that, but family life is not as it was for the Waltons, with everyone going in different directions, not many sit-down meals, kids eating from fast food places and vending machines, if that.
I have heard a lot of stories from my mom and her sisters about life during the Depression. They were very poor, six people in a very small, two-room house. Their garden was always huge, though, as they lived on a piece of land a couple miles from town and the town was not interested in their land, not until just the last few years before my grandmother moved to a nursing home. Anyway, they lived off of that garden, canning, pickling, even selling a bit of their produce. My aunt told me about how, as a young girl, she used to do my grandmothers hair for her in pieces of sheets to curl it, and my grandmother would get upset with her if she did it wrong. There was no money for hair salons.
One episode of Little House on the Prairie really stuck with me; it was one about Christmas time when the kids all got a sock with an orange, a candy cane, and a cloth doll their mom crafted. The girls were thrilled with their Christmas socks, and the contrast between those simple gifts and the extent of our Christmas madness nowadays made a big impression on me.