Climbing frames and slides set in concrete.
oven doors that get skin meltingly hot, oh hang on.. still got one of those.
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Good riddance! Things you don't see anymore, thank heavens!
(132 Posts)Dandycord kitchen mats, drop an egg on one of those and unless you took it outside & hosed it down you could never get rid of it (bleurgh)
Brushed bri nylon sheets, much loved by B&B landladys back in the day. (Often purple, for some reason 
Or perhaps they haven't disappeared, just fallen out of favour and are still available, stored in vast warehouses somewhere?
What a lot of memories these all bring back. Second or is it about ninth good riddance to sanitary towels. Disposing of them at school. The smell they made in the burner thing. Unforgettable.
What about nylon nighties. I had several when I got married. They were supposed to look sexy! They just made me sweat. Sanitary towels with loops and a belt. They weren't disposable so I remember having to bring them home to put on the fire. This was when I was at school. Cars which had a choke. You had to keep it pulled out until you were sure the engine was warm and wouldn't cut out. Going out for dinner with friends and they'd light their cigs up while you were eating and envelop you with smoke. Going home from work every day stinking of smoke. Ice on the inside of bedroom windows in the winter. I could go on and on!!
Scratchy loo paper! Thought I'd seen the last of it when one d ay when I was a ward sister, the stores porter delivered a box of it. Had big battle with Manager- I was n't having that for my patients! Think they must have found a supply in the back of a cupboard. Won the battle!
Smog, nylon shirts, tripe and cow heel, corduroy trousers. No doubt I'll think of more
My younger sister, aged 3, decorated the sideboard with Dr Whites sanitary towels. Mum had a new baby, we had a Christmas Tree so younger sister decided to help make the front room look joyful. Mum was mortified and kept apologising to the neighbour who called to see the baby - it's my fault, my poor mum said repeatedly. She said the same thing when the same younger sister came into the sitting room with mum's contraceptive cap ' what's this mummy' my naughty little sister asked. I was all of 8 and had no idea what it was, it just looked like something my sister should have left in the bathroom drawer…..
When I found some STs and asked what they were, I was told they were "Mummy's cotton wool" - so I was none the wiser!
When I first started my periods my Mum insisted on me leaving the used towels in the bathroom so she could "check them"!! This did not last thank goodness. I am not sure what she was looking for!
Boys getting the cane, girls getting the ruler.
Breaking the ice off the outside loos at school before being able to use them.
Everything being shut on Sundays. You couldn't even visit someone in our local hospital. Not only that, if you were a child your parents weren't always allowed to visit in case it upset you.
Girls not being allowed to wear trousers to school in cold winters. I got caught in a hailstorm once and my legs were raw afterwards.
Shoes that leaked.
Women in hairnets over rollers. The end result usually looked just as bad so as a child I used to wonder 'Why?'.
Adults who used to think that you should just accept their rulings without having to explain the reasoning behind them.
Wow janerowena that's a list with which i agree. It reminds us that progress has indeed been made. Physical abuse in schools was abhorrent and frightening. I was never hit at school, or at home, but witnessing assaults scared me. No, it didn't influence my behaviour
Pens that needed ink- dip and scratch or fountain it didn't matter. They blotted and leaked and made messes on my paper and in my bag. Biros still do it occasionally but nothing like as often.
Rags in my hair and home perms. My mother wanted me to have curls, so rags at night when I was 3 and my first home perm when I was 12-nightmare!
Nylon sheets have already been mentioned but, combined with a bri-nylon nightie, I used to slip into bed and cause a small firework display. Wonder I didn't set the bed alight with all that static electricity. Also, sitting in front of the fire, my legs were blotchy, my face burning and my back like ice, and the thought of leaving to room to go to the freezing cold loo, with the freezing cold seat - I learnt good bladder control.
How reminiscent is this thread!! Brought back so many memories. I can still smell that Aladdin paraffin heater in the kitchen on winter mornings while I ate my porridge before going to school, having dressed in my freezing bedroom with ice patterns on the inside of the window,
And ...... oh dear ....... Izal toilet paper in school during periods
. not a happy combination! Sorry folks!
What a great thread, have enjoyed reading all the posts, yes, so many memories and things I had forgotton.The cold seems to have played a big part, and periods and sanitary towels and suspenders and lisle stockings, they were yukky.Ditto the Izal toilet paper.I do remember having painful hands in Winter as a child, red and chilblains.The freezing cold and snow waiting for buses that never turned up.Or worse, they arrived but you couldn't get on, the queue was too long.
Chilblains - and I remember scratchy Bronco toilet paper, as well as Izal.
Oh yes, the snow and the buses and trying to get into work. Sometime in the 60s I struggled into work (in high heels) through snow. I had to catch two buses and arrived about 15 minutes late. The boss had the nerve to tell me off for being late.
In the late 50s mum insisted that I had to wear Liberty Bodices to school. I was about 13 and hated them. As soon as I arrived in school I hurried to the "bogs" as we called them, took the bodice off and kept it in my satchel. Put it back on at home time.
The first thing I bought with my wages was a set of black nylon underwear from Marks. 
Hand knitted loopy bonnets. My grandma knitted them for us and I hated mine.
Sanitary towels which hung off the loops of those awful belts. Alternative pads did come in in the mid 60s, as well as tampons, but thank God for the discovery of those tacky glues and close fitting pants which made modern protection so much more civilised. (I am past it all now.)
I see I have should have read all previous as my whinges were the same.
No time I should be off to the delights of my food shopping not sitting here posting.
Scratchy woollen blankets!
Such an interesting thread, bringing back many memories. The once-a-week bath thing, too. Doesn't seem possible now. Parents, mainly mothers, telling you, " Because I say so".
We had to have IZAL toilet paper, because my stepsister, and my auntie, both worked there, so it came cheap, sometimes free, through them.
I was glad to see the back of our 10p in the slot TV, it always ran out in the middle of something good, if we`d forgotten to ply it with coins earlier. One good thing about it, excess money when it was emptied came back to us as vouchers for Oxendales catalogue, got a few new clothes for our 2 oldest children from that.
Great memories - thank you all 
I remember my little brother and his friends playing 'Doctors' and appearing in front of my mother and her afternoon tea guests with sanitary towels looped around their ears as medical masks. It was very hard to keep a straight face!
I recognise so many of these things. The STs and their disposal seems to feature in worst memories of most of us.
The icy cold rooms with no central heating etc, Chilblains frost insde out hose windows.
We were a tough lot when we were young, putting up with all this although we had little choice. Just remembering many of these thing make me shudder. This thread should be shown to today's young women.
I suspect the majority of us on here were born post war and did not have to experience the stressess of the war.
Our parents lived through the 1930s economic crises and the stress of the war years. For them the post war years we have been "complaining about" must have seemed very positive times to them. They saw the introduction of all the positive changes of the welfare state which most certainly benefitted our generation.
Perhaps the generations since then have rather taken all this for granted.
"stresses" even.
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