You don't know what they've been through or experienced. Probably the same stuff eveybody has gone through growing into adulthood. But with the added pressures of social media.
I didn't say I didn't like what you think.. I asked you a reasonable question and you've come back with innuendo,insult and assumptions. As for the rest of your reply,you really do come across as a condescending know all who knows very little.I was born in 1961,both my parents were born in the 30's,one brought up in Hull and Driffield,the other brought up in Chadwell Heath,London( he was shipped out to Ayrshire due to the bombings).Neither were traumatised,neither bullied or intimidated their offspring but they sought discipline and respect at home and during my education.You've chosen to insult a generation who suffered far more than you or I will ever have to,your comments are contemptible at best and unnecessary. Most drink sodden oldies like me wore a School uniform as a requirement of the School and I can't say I ever had any issue with it.Some parents couldn't(and still can't) afford to kit our their kids in expensive trainers and designer gear.The wearing of a uniform negates the need for some children to feel inferior to their peers,it's a level playing field for all,it works,it requires very little input from Teachers to 'police'. To suggest that anyone with a different opinion to you suffers from anger issues and can't deal with modern day issues, is absolute bunkum ...Perhaps it is you that needs to look at yourself in the mirror and examine your own anger issues and mannerisms...
I didn't insult a generation. I stated that many suffered during the war and carried trauma through their lives from it. It resulted in some teachers (and parents as you and Cityzen have altered my meaning to) in the 1950s-1970s thinking it was ok/necessary to hit children to install discipline, or not having the empathy to see what they were doing was wrong. My children never wore designer clothes to school. They wore normal clothes. A uniform is extra cost for parents. I haven't suggested that anyone with anger issues is anything. I suggested that some pensioners haven't accepted that them being hit as children was wrong and see children nowadays as soft. It's fine to disagree and discuss, but I'd prefer you didn't change the meaning of what I post.
My parents were born before and after ww2. My maternal grandparents were in ww2 (royal navy and my grandmother walked around the docklands area of London checking that lights were extinguished/black out curtains in place during the bombing raids - all her brothers were killed in action), my paternal grandfather was in the trenches at 17 in ww1. My family moved back to England after getting caught up in the bush war in Rhodesia and fortunately surviving a bomb attack (my maternal grandfather stayed and fought in that war until he was in his late 50s).
And did your grandparents beat the **** out of your parents? Did they become pissed up pensioners? or was it just other people’s parents or teachers who served in WW2 who became sadistic bullies?
My grandfather got badly poisoned by chlorine gas and had lifelong health issues until a premature death. Yes, he was a violent bully towards my father. My maternal grandfather got addicted to war and it never ended for him. Both suffered trauma, although would never have admitted it and were victims and offenders. Life isn't black and white.
My parents went though the war in the services, grandparents fought in WW1 and were alive during WW2. None of them were violent or bullies. Though at 6’ and 18 stone my dad could have been if he was that inclined. Chlorine gas? Heard of its widespread use in WW1 but not WW2.
Yes. I wrote my paternal grandfather was in ww1, not ww2 - there was a 18 year age differenxe between my parents.
Yes, you can watch the city dwelling visitors sitting under signs stating “Don’t feed the seagulls” feeding the seagulls. Who then think everyone else’s chips are for them as well.
Then you and your parents were fortunate to have stability and ppl who could come back to normal life. My paternal grandfather was sick and focused his anger, ill health and frustration at dreams being destroyed on his own family. My maternal grandfather won medals for bravery and service in ww2, but couldn't go back to normal life and ended up now being labelled a war criminal working alongside Ian Henderson during the mau mau rebellion. Saw out his days in Rhodesia and then Zimbabwe as a largely absent family member. One man's hero is another family's villain.
I now have visions of you being expelled for insisting you were a wolf. I do hope it was for something substantial and not something I'd consider trivial like going to school with a Howlin' Wolf single or having your hair touch your collar. An injustice in the 60s is still an injustice. I don't see that they are indulging her. From the article she told the teacher that she's a wolf and the teacher said ok. There may be a piece of paper with her name and the word wolf after it. So what? I'm pretty sure it'll make no difference to her education and her life after school.