17 Outdated Behaviors From The Past That Would Be Considered Incredibly Strange To Do Today
By Raven Ishak,
2024-07-25
As we age, certain things we could do back in the day would be considered weird AF to do today. So when Reddit user u/Red_Baronnsfw asked the r/AskOldPeople community, "What's one thing normal at your time but is now bizarre to even think about?" Many people provided their thoughts. Here's what they said below.
1. "Smoking in hospitals and on airplanes."
2. "Anytime you answered a phone, you had no idea who was calling you. Not knowing one single person's phone number — except my vet's office of 30 years. For some reason, it is the only number I still remember. Not including Jenny's number, of course."
3. "Paper maps. You had to figure out your own route to where you wanted to go, and road trips seemed more of an adventure back then."
4. "How utterly unsupervised we were as tiny children. I remember taking care of my brother by myself for the full summer while my parents worked starting at eight; he was four."
"Yes, and my parents would leave us four kids in the car while they stopped for groceries. It seemed like they were gone for a while, but I'm not sure now. At least long enough for everyone to be dared to honk the horn, run the windshield wipers, and, if we were really brave, get out and run in a circle around the car."
6. "Just not knowing. If you were meeting up with a friend at a certain place and time, and they didn't show up, there was no way to follow up. If you didn't know whether a certain celebrity was alive or dead, you asked a friend and hoped they were right. Where is the closest veterinarian? What does it mean when my car makes a beeping sound? What year did the Hundred Years War end? What should you do if you break a toe? Pre-internet, all of these things were mysteries, and you had to hope you had smart friends or a very well-stocked library nearby."
7. "Arriving at the airport shortly before takeoff, checking your luggage with minimal to no hassle, and boarding your flight."
8. "Always carrying dimes, later quarters, when on a date, in case things went sideways."
9. "The sounds younger people will never know of listening to your modem connect to the internet. It was such a specific, strange series of noises that is instantly recognizable to anyone who lived during the time of dial-up modems."
10. "The milkman. Milk, eggs, cheese, and other dairy-adjacent items are delivered to the house weekly. And the milk and OJ were in the glass, returnable bottles."
12. "Photos were expensive, rare, and it took time to even see how they turned out. You took pictures, dropped your film off (e.g., at a photo booth/stand with a person in a grocery store parking lot or at a film processing shop), then waited for the film to be developed and printed (roughly a week). It costed extra to expedite."
13. "Calling the movie theater to see what was playing and what the showtimes were."
14. "The Dewey Decimal System was the only way to find a book."
15. "Running to my mailbox hoping to get a letter from my girlfriend away at college. Or finally getting that cool thing I mail ordered eight weeks ago."
Older people, was there a thing that was considered normal at your time but is now considered bizarre to even think about? Tell us what it was in the comments below.
When we were kids, the milkman used to pay us a bottle of chocolate milk to jump on the truck and run the milk bottles to the doors of our local neighborhood. He saved himself a lot of work!
GreenTea
08-23
Reading a newspaper and knowing they couldn’t “delete” an article later when they wanted it to “disappear” when it hurts their chosen political candidate.” They had to tell the truth because it was in black and white and thousands of people had a copy of the article.
Get updates delivered to you daily. Free and customizable.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.