Life in the 80's
*I am a child of the 70's and 80's. That is what I prefer to
be called. The
90's can do without me. Grunge isn't here to stay, fashion is
fickle and
"Generation X" is a myth created by some over-40 writer trying
to figure out
why people wear flannel in the summer.
*When I got home from school, I played Atari 2600. I spent
hours playing
Pitfall or Combat or Breakout or Dodge'em Cars or Frogger. I
never did beat
Asteroids. Then I watched "Scooby Doo." Daphne was a
Goddess,
and I thought
Shaggy was smoking something synthetic in the back of the
Mystery Machine. I
HATED SCRAPPY.
*I would sleep over at friends' houses on the weekends. We
played army with
G.I. Joe figures, and I set up galactic wars between Autobots
and Decepticons.
We stayed up half the night throwing marshmallows and Velveeta
at one another.
We never beat Rubik's cube, unless you count taking off the
stickers (or, for
the more experienced person, taking the actual cubes off the
base and
rearranging them).
*I got up on Saturday mornings at 6 a.m. to watch bad
Hanna-Barbera cartoons
like "The Snorks," "Jabberjaw," "Captain Caveman," and
SpaceGhost." In between
I would watch "School House Rock." ("Conjunction Junction,
what's your
function?!") On Friday Night, Daisy Duke was my future wife.
I
was going to
own the General Lee and shoot dynamite arrows out the back.
Why did they weld
the doors shut?
*Did your dad turn from mild-mannered Bill Bixby into "The
Incredible Hulk"
when he got upset? At the movies the Nerds got revenge on the
Alpha Betas by
teaming up with the Omega Mu's. I watched Indiana Jones save
the Ark of the
Covenant, and wondered what Yoda meant when he said, "No,
there
is another."
Ronald Reagan was cool. Gorbachev was the guy who built a
McDonalds in
Moscow. My family took summer vacations to South Florida and
collected
"Muppet Movie" glasses along the way (we had the whole set).
My siblings and
I fought in the back seat. At the hotel we found creative
uses
for Connect
Four pieces like throwing them in that big air conditioning
unit.
*I listened to John Cougar Mellencamp sing about Little Pink
Houses for Jack
and Diane. I was bewildered by Boy George and the colors of
his dreams, red,
gold and green. I was a "Wild Boy," Duran Duran. MTV played
MUSIC videos.
Nickelodeon played "You Can't Do That On Television" and
"Dangermouse". Does
anyone remember the "Banana Splits?" HBO showed Mike Tyson
pummel everybody
except Robin Givens, the bad actress from "Head of the Class,"
who took all
Mike's cashflow. I drank Dr. Pepper. "I'm a Pepper, you're a
Pepper,
wouldn't you like to be a Pepper too?" Shasta was for losers.
TAB was a
laboratory accident. Capri Sun was a social statement. Orange
Juice wasn't
just for breakfast anymore, and bacon had to move over for
something leaner.
*My mom put a thousand Little Debbie Snack Cakes in my Charlie
Brown lunchbox
and our world was the backyard and it was all you needed. With
your pink
portable tape player, Debbie Gibson sang back up to you and
everyone wanted a
skirt like the Material Girl and a glove like Michael
Jackson's. Today, we
are the ones who sing along with Bruce Springsteen and The
Bangles perfectly
and have no idea why. We recite lines from Ghostbusters and
still look to the
Goonies for a great adventure. We flip through T.V. stations
and stop at the
A-Team and Knight Rider and Fame and laugh with The Cosby Show
and Family Ties
and Punky Brewster and "What you talkin 'bout Willis?" We
hold
strong
affections for The Muppets and The Care Bears and why did they
take the Smurfs
off of the air? After School Specials were about cigarettes
and step-
families. The Polka Dot Door was nothing like Barney, and
aren't the Power
Rangers just Voltron reincarnated? We are the ones who still
read Nancy Drew,
The Hardy Boys, The Bobbsey Twins, Beverly Cleary, and Judy
Blume.
*Friendship bracelets were ties you couldn't break and
friendship pins went on
shoes - preferably hightop velcro Reebok-And pegged jeans were
in, as were
unit belts and layered socks and jean jackets and JAMS and
charm necklaces and
side pony tails and just tails. Rave was a girl's best
friend;
braces with
colored rubberbands made you rad.
*The backdoor was always open and Mom served only red kool-aid
to the
neighborhood kids-YOU NEVER drank the New Coke. Entertainment
was cheap and
lasted for hours. All you needed to be a princess was high
heels and an apron;
the Sit'n'Spin always made you dizzy but never made you stop;
Pogoballs were
dangerous weapons and Chinese Jump Ropes never failed to trip
someone. In
your underoos you wore Wonder Woman, Spider Man or R2D2 and in
your treehouse
you were king.
*In the 80's, nothing was wrong. Did you know the president
was
shot? Star
Wars was not only a movie. Did you ever play in a bomb
shelter? Did you see
the Challanger explode or feed the homeless man? We forgot
Vietnam and
watched Tiananmen Square on CNN. We didn't start the fire
Billy Joel. In the
80's we redefined the American Dream, and those years defined
us. We are the
generation in between strife and facing strife and not turning
our backs. It's
that idealism that will push us and be passed to our
children-the first
children of the Twenty-first century.
*We had neighborhoods where in the day we could play
kick-the-can, "guns" and
all of the things that made us grow up. There was always that
one field that
could be used for either baseball, football, homerun derby, or
just a place to
hang
out. That was my field of dreams, Mr. Costner. At night we
would play
flashlight tag. Just like we could trick-or-treat at night
without the fear of
being shot and killed. Just like our guns had caps or lasers.
If we didn't
have the Jessie James guns we could just get a rock and smash
the caps on the
ground! We loved the orange race tracks...that was until our
mother realized
she could smack us with them. We were the kids that not only
collected Cabbage
Patch kids, but their ugly offspring-Garbage Pail Kids. We
too
collected
football and baseball cards but it was because we wanted to be
the first in
the neighborhood to have the "complete" set.
*Sports were important, but not near as important as
Friday/Saturdaynight's
Main Event with of our favorite WWF wrestlers. We loved to
imitate their
moves until someone got hurt. In our neighborhoods we played
with He-man and
Skelator. Going to get a Happy Meal on Saturday with dad or
mom was worth
waiting the other six days of the week.
*No, we are the furthest thing from a lost generation. Does
going to arcades
on Saturday, getting carpooled to football
with your best friend, eating fruit roll-ups, having birthday
parties at
McDonalds or Godfather's pizza or Noble Romans where you could
make your own
pizza, express you are lost? How many people melted their
army figures that
were given to them by their parents. Was Green Lantern the
Coolest Super Hero
or Aquaman? "Wonder Twin powers activate!" How's about coming
home at night
and separating your candy into: The cool stuff, the homemade
stuff, and the
pennies... how's about the candy that came in that awful
orange
and black wax
paper? Did you ever try it? Do you remember the
one house that had a sign in the candybowl that said, "Take
One." How many
did you take if you liked it? Were you desperate one year and
as a teenager
you trick-or-treated?
*Our generation had character and heart. We played with real
baseballs and
"Putt putt for the fun of it." "Hey, my mom will take us if
your mom picks
up!" Could you ever really beat Indiana Jones and the Temple
of
Doom...How's
about Adventure? Did you have sliced oranges or grapes for
your half-time
treat? How's about the hot dog and coke after each
football and baseball games? Star Crunches? Whippy Dip?
Twinkies? Ho-ho's?
This is what WE are all about! So if you
are reading this and it ALL hit's home then you do indeed have
a heritage or a
generation. This is what makes us the most unique generation
of all.
Back to the Begning
Back to the Index
View My Guestbook~*~*~Sign My Guestbook
Page me on Icq!