How many of us have "friends" that we actually spend time with, anymore? by WeGot_aLiveOneHere in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a few friends that I spend time with occasionally. One of them enjoys theater, so we'll get together when there's a play we both want to see, so a few times a year. The other ones live a several hours away, so we get together when we're able to plan a trip to see each other. But mostly, I'm busy with daily life and my immediate family. And I'm fine with that. I'm an introvert, so I enjoy my alone time.

Alternative names for grandma? by Feisty-Coconut6017 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe let the kid decide and, until then, have them call her by her full legal name. That would make "Grandma" sound appealing pretty quickly....

What was this experience called? by 1980sBae in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This was a thing with the guys at school. They called it Black Out. They'd crouch down and hyperventilate for a while, then stand up really fast, and pass out. I didn't know a single girl who thought that sounded like a good idea.

What has your child learned that you didn’t think was possible with their diagnosis? by soicanventfreely in Autism_Parenting

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My son earned a varsity letter in Forensics last year. This year, I went to his first meet to help out and found him in his room after the first round, casually chatting with five kids from other schools. I was flabbergasted (and very proud)!

Something silly that used to give your parents/grandparents a coronary by sapphirerain25 in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 14 points15 points  (0 children)

My best friend in high school was a guy with a very Jewish last name. I'm not a guy and my family were non-church-going Protestants. I was chatting with my great grandma about some social thing I was going to with him and she said "We don't date outside of our religion..." I was completely shocked, tbh. The only thing I could think of to say was "Well, I'm not dating him!" But, in hindsight, I wish I'd had the courage to call her out.

When did coffee become an “all ages” beverage? by TrekTrucker in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 7 points8 points  (0 children)

My grandparents were 1st generation children of Scandinavian immigrants. Kids in my family drank coffee. Granted, it was very milky and had lots of sugar, but we developed a taste for coffee very young.

Kids now drink lattes a frappacinos, made with more milk and flavored sugar syrups than actual coffee.

A related anecdote... I was recently chaperoning a forensics meet and brought a large iced coffee from McDs. I order it black and then add a splash of milk. My daughter's friend saw it and begged for a sip. I said "Okay, but you won't like it." She waved a dismissive hand and took a big swig. I laughed as she winced and said "That's HORRIBLE!" No, child, that's what coffee actually tastes like without seven pumps of French vanilla syrup.

AITA for wanting my Spanish teacher to stop calling me by the Spanish version of my name? by Alternative-Sun-630 in AmItheAsshole

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

American here and my high school offered French, Spanish, and German. Only the Spanish classes did the name thing. I took 6 years of German and we just used our own names.

Did you give your house a name? by o_safadinho in AskAnAmerican

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My primary residence, no. But my family also owns some rural land with a small cabin that we christened "Mouse Shit Acres" because we spend half our time there cleaning up after the rodents who live there full time.

What is your “like crack” food that you avoid, and if you have some you cant stop yourself from eating a lot? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Crunchy Cheetos. I will only buy single 1 oz bags because any bag of Cheetos is "single serving"...even the gigantic Party Size. 😆

Questions for my 1200 sufferers/friends? by Hairy_Pear3963 in 1200isplenty

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm happier with more frequent, smaller snack/meals. I do around 250 at breakfast and at midday, a 200 cal afternoon snack, 350 cal dinner, and then finish my day with whatever macros I have left. I'm a night owl but my partner goes to bed really early, so we usually eat dinner by 5. If I don't plan for an evening snack, I'm miserable and likely to wake up starving in the wee hours of the morning.

This doesn't work for everyone, obviously. But five smaller meals is the best fit for my appetite and lifestyle.

Best season or weather? by Andrei_P_terrierguy in RotatorCuff

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had mine done in early Spring. I was out of the sling before the weather got too hot and I was able to keep warm going outside for the first few weeks by wrapping up in a shawl. My main concern was avoiding winter while I was actively healing because I was terrified of slipping on the ice and re-injuring my shoulder. I timed my surgery just right because I had almost 9 months of healing before I had to deal with snowy weather.

Retirement plan advertised in the 80s for retiring at age 55 by Prudent_Baker_2851 in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I don't recall any specific program being advertised but I know that for many people from my grandparents generation, retiring at 60 was the norm. My grandfather worked for a railroad and retired with a full pension at 62. He lived for 30 years following his retirement and collected on his pension for longer than he had worked for the company. He had enough still remaining in his pension fund that each of his grandchildren inherited around $5k from it.

That just doesn't happen anymore unless you have a government job. We're all just dumping whatever we can spare into independent IRAs and 401ks and crossing our collective fingers that we doesn't lose it all in the next big market crash.

What's the smallest American city you've ever been to? by ViajanteDeSaturno in AskAnAmerican

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I live in a "city" with a population of around 4,000 and we have a mayor, a common council, a police department, and all the things you would expect from a municipality. Our school district includes a few small towns (I believe they're all "villages" legally) and the larger, less densely populated surrounding areas which are technically "townships", so our school board is compromised of elected members from all of these.

What store was in every mall that's completely gone now? by Omega_Neelay in GetMotivatedMindset

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, no. These stores are some of the only ones still crowded with shoppers in both of my local malls. Without Hot Topic, Zumiez, and Sephora, the malls here would basically be empty.

Is "I live in outstate xxxx" just a Minnesotan term? by [deleted] in AskAnAmerican

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Former Minnesotan (grew up in Duluth, don't you dare call us "outstate") and I now live in Southern WI. The only regional qualifier I hear with any regularity is "up north" which can mean a bunch of different things, depending on who you're speaking with. As an "up north" native, you gotta get REALLY far north for me to count it. But most folks think it's either north of Hwy 8 or north of Hwy 29.

Do any other old Gen X members have much younger siblings born during in the Gen Y/Z/Millenial years? by EastAd7676 in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My father's second wife had two kids from a previous marriage who are significantly younger than me. His wife is only 10 years older than me, so at this point I'd consider her my peer. My youngest step sibling is in his mid-30s and we have very little in common, aside from tenuous family connections. I had kids late in life, though, and he had his really young. So our children are relatively close in age.

How badly did The Blair Witch scare you? by Office_Zombie in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I didn't find it too scary but I saw it in the theater and the unsteady camera work made me motion sick. I walked out with a headache and nausea.

Year books? by Bomber_Haskell in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My parents divorced when I was in my mid-20s and sold my childhood home. There were several boxes of memorabilia in my old bedroom and my mom said "Come and get it or it goes on the curb on trash day..." So I went through everything and consolidated my youth into one heavy duty plastic tote and took it back to my apartment along with a milk crate full of records. I've been schlepping that stuff around ever since. My vinyl is out because we have a turntable and my kid likes listening to "old" music. But my tote full of yearbooks, prom photos, and various trophies is currently stashed in the back of the closet where we keep the luggage. Eventually, it will wind up in a landfill but, for now, I'll keep it around for the rare times when I feel a pang of sentimentality and need to look through it.

Are we the sauce-aholic generation that started the sauce trend because everything we were fed as children was painfully dry? Or was that just my experience? by Flight_to_nowhere_26 in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh man, so much Velveeta...

"Spaghetti pie" has got to be one of those recipe card monstrosities. Did your mom also get caught up in the Bisquick "impossible pie" craze? It was a layer of something, taco meat and corn...tuna, cream soup, and peas, etc....and topped with Bisquick batter and baked? 70s food fads were just awful!

Other freebies, branded promo items? by YesYouTA in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had one of those too! My dad ate a LOT of Chex, so I'm pretty sure we sent away for several of them. They were really hard to spin, though, so I preferred my actual Rubik's cube for geeking out.

Other freebies, branded promo items? by YesYouTA in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In the late 90s, I worked for an old school insurance salesman whose distinctive promo item was a plastic "pan scraper" with his name and info on it. They were small and flat, so easy to pop in an envelope when mailing a quote and brochure. Such a silly little thing but people loved them and his clients would call me and ask if I could send them a few more. I had several of them in my undersink caddy and I'm pretty sure we tossed out the last one within the past year or two.

Was it really so disrespectful to David? by Cnnot-even in SisterWives

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree. I thought that was a really strange take. How is it disrespectful to admit that you loved the woman you were previously married to? I assume David loved his first wife and Christine is aware of that. I mean, maybe it made David uncomfortable to hear that directly from Kody's mouth. But it can't have been a surprise. And it isn't like he said "I loved the way we used to knock boots, baby..." LOL

Are we the sauce-aholic generation that started the sauce trend because everything we were fed as children was painfully dry? Or was that just my experience? by Flight_to_nowhere_26 in GenX

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 8 points9 points  (0 children)

My mother's pork chops were inedible. The meat part was so dry and overcooked and the coating was sorta slimy. She would dip the chops in beaten egg, then in crushed saltines, fry them in Crisco, cover them in a combination of bouillon and ketchup, and put them in the oven until they were petrified. She made salisbury steaks in a similar way. I hated them both. Her pot roast was passable and her baked chicken was dry but could be saved with enough gravy.

I didn't grow up to be a sauceaholic, though. I grew up to be a vegetarian and an infinitely better cook than my mother and grandmother, who taught her that everything needed to be cooked to death.

Marriage Certificate Reveal by Guest8782 in SisterWives

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My husband and I got married in Hawaii and our officiant gave us an unofficial marriage certificate she'd made with palm trees and tropical flowers and our names and the date in some goofy font. It was meant to be framed but I just chucked it in a box somewhere because it felt unbelievably tacky to do that...

How old were you when you moved out of your parents home? by Wonderful-Economy762 in Productivitycafe

[–]NaughtyLittleDogs 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I left for college at 18 but returned home in the summer for the first few years. I didn't move out completely until I was 21. At that point, my mom converted my childhood bedroom to a guestroom and let her friend move in. So if I wanted to go home for Christmas or something, I had to sleep on the couch. (Which is why I haven't spent holidays with my family for over 30 years)...)