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What Did Your Parents Do Which Was Cultural Normal At The Time Yet Wrong These Days?
I was slapped in the face, around the head and I remember my dad getting me on the floor and sitting on me for 10 mins till I felt caustaphobic and couldnt breath. He was half laughing. I would swear and shout at him but he wouldn't get off and would start tapping my mouth instead with his hand
Depsite this my parents would generally be considered good and it was the 90's so it was within cultural norms.
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No best answer has yet been selected by bluefortress. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Lots of things of course! I do things that are culturally a no-no now. T'was ever thus and always shall be.
If you swore and shouted at your dad, I'm not surprised he sat on you. I am currently thinking of chucking a bucket of cold water over my grandson next time he throws a 2-yr-old's paddy. I will have a soapy sponge ready to wipe hismouth out at the same time..... well, I can dream.
Back in the sixties?
Flog my butt,, lock me in my room,, send me to bed without dinner if I refused to eat it.
But it was served up as breakfast if I hadn't eaten the previous nights dinner,,
Any punishment that was deemed acceptable back in those days
But, they knew no better.
Hopefully we know better these days🤔
That wasn't culturally normal in the UK at any time.
It used to be normal for parents to leave their children in bed in chalets and caravans on holiday whilst they were in the site club.
The staff would walk round the site listening for crying children. It wouldn't happen today.
We never had that sort of holiday so didn't experience it.
Babies were left in their prams and pushchairs outside shops, hairdressers etc - they were far too big to be taken inside.
Now people won't even leave their dogs outside whilst they nip in to the newsagents for the paper.
Strangers thought it acceptable to playfully poke babies in the tummy, put fingers in babies' mouths and sometimes press a 'lucky' coin in to the babies' hands.
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