Well, just think what a lucky boy you are to have a bike from which to fall. Mum, it’s terrible, I’ve just fallen off my bike and gashed my leg, which is now bleeding horribly. This was true in all homes, but the ban was imposed in a particularly fierce way in ours, at least up to the time of my mother’s departure: (Post continues below.)īragging was not allowed, nor was any form of complaint. LISTEN: Richard Glover reminisces with Mia Freedman on No Filter. The boast ‘I got 99 out of 100 for maths,’ was nearly always met with the rejoinder ‘So where did you lose the mark?’ One of these phrases, or more commonly both, would greet any achievement. There were two favourite phrases used at the time: ‘Don’t get too big for your boots’ and ‘No one likes a big-noter’. They may have had a bit on their plate.Ĭertainly, a common response to the arrival of children was to put them in their place. Only 16 per cent of the couples had lived together before marriage, compared to 81 per cent now. Children followed pretty swiftly the typical first-time mother was 24. In 1974, for example, the average age of an Australian bride was 20.9 years her groom was 23. Many of the mothers and fathers were little more than kids themselves. You couldn’t really blame people for their careless attitude to parenting in the ’70s.
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