It was a Chinese. It was good though. Used to be Hatfield's which sold unbelievable potted meat. Or Walter Pybus' the gents outfitters. Which didn't.
Likewise. Snooker either there or get me old man to sign me in to the Memorial Club. Saw some good bands at Hilltop anarl. I spent a lot of time in De la Pole as a kid. Not invited, it was just a great place to play. Bloody good conker trees as I recall. Spent hours climbing trees, hiding from orderlies and generally running amock. And taking the piss out of people whose life experiences I couldn't then hope to have understood. The past is a foreign country innit; we did things differently there.
Yep did you call your mates Dellas? As in pass the ball you ****ing Della, meaning person with mental health problems. Just ahull thing?
Della was a great insult! We referenced De la Pole constantly as a pejorative term when we were kids. Bender, Spazz, Jigger, Della. This was once practically the limit of my vocabulary. It's language that I'm now not comfortable using and it sounds alien to me but growing up in the eighties we didn't question that they might have been terms that particularly offended. They were just words. Della is very much a Hull (and East Riding) thing. In Newcastle it would render people totally bemused. They'd probably say 'What type of a word's Della? You'd have to have escaped from St. Nick's to use a word like that.'
It's shocking isn't it. We just didn't know. Like kids getting the yellow bus with square wheels to school. We as a society treat them like lepers back then. I remember years ago doing a bit of work, diggingand tarmacing, at dulverton school. It had changed to a special needs school in the nineties and just the sheer joy of the kids getting off the bus or out of taxis everyday was a joy to behold.
****in' Della. We used that all the time. Biggest laugh was my mates mams name was Della. We never let it lie.
Dellas, window lickers, spaz wagons, all things my kids would never dream of saying. Different world.
The word 'spazz' was short for Spastic. Horrible term, but not so long ago accepted as a medical term and even used by the charity group 'Spastic Society' . Similar path in progression from the N word?
Is it different in America? I'm sure I've seen it said in fairly recent and otherwise non-edgy American TV show.
Cock, it was Chinese. The dishes I had in my head were all Chinese too. My head is clearly ****ed with age. If I'd remembered it changed to the Mandarin I may have twigged and not looked like an arse. Well, maybe. Or not. It was ace though. Best er... curries or something ever.
I used to attend the PHAB Club (Physically Handicapped and Able Bodied) before I joined up, I had an Aunt who was handicapped. I think those who attended had quite a phlegmatic approach to how folk innocently expressed themselves; in fact in most cases they did it themselves, as it wasn't seen as hurtful or wrong. Society has certainly changed.
'Slightly' less derogatory, I had a mate for years that I only ever knew as Fatty Rawlings, never considered that it wasn't his real name until I called round for him one day and asked his Mum, quite innocently, if Fatty was in! She made it quite apparent that she wasn't amused!!