What a fun to read
thread!
I have no idea what YOUR age is, but when I was young:
Pantyhose didn't exist. We used garter belts to hold up our nylon stockings. Panties and brassieres were called underwear, not "Intimates." Most underwear was white.
If you used the word ho(e) in speech, you were talking about a farm/gardening implement and nothing else.
Typing was an elective in junior/senior high school,and all of the typewriters were manual. Girls couldn't elect to take Woodshop. Boys only. Boys couldn't elect to take Cooking or Sewing. Girls Only.
There was no 24-hour anything on television. Most stations stopped broadcasting at midnight or 1 a.m and resumed programming the next morning.
Reality television was watching a Fishing or Hunting Show, not Housewives of New York.
Dogs were superstars and heroes. Rin-Tin-Tin and Lassie were always saving someone somewhere. The movie, Old Yeller, made us cry.
Given names were simpler and easier to spell. We were Mary and Bob, Barbara and John, Kathy and Dennis. No Siobhans among us.
Elected officials were generally respected and shown respect. We even believed that they deserved and earned it.
Almost every adult smoked cigarettes.
Cars were sh

t back then. Men were always working on them, and when they weren't working on them, they were talking about them.
In my neighborhood, there was a small mom and pop grocery (Staples: milk, bread, candy and cigarettes) on every other block.
There were no zipcodes or casual talk about home values and appreciation. Most of us didn't have credit cards. Many didn't even have checking accounts. Cash ruled.
The word "Hey" was never used as a greeting or a substitute for "hello." If you heard "Hey" back then, someone probably wanted to ask you something, give you a warning, or inform you that your slip was showing or that your zipper was unzipped.
Susan