Tanners & Bobs

harryb replied on 27/08/2019 09:56

Posted on 27/08/2019 09:56

Can you relate to this. Say yes and you give your age away laughing

TANNERS & BOBS

Back in the days of tanners and bobs, 
When Mothers had patience and Fathers had jobs. 
When football team families wore hand me down shoes, 
And T.V gave only two channels to choose.

Back in the days of three penny bits, 
when schools employed nurses to search for your nits. 
When snowballs were harmless; ice slides were permitted 
and all of your jumpers were warm and hand knitted.

Back in the days of hot ginger beers, 
when children remained so for more than six years. 
When children respected what older folks said, 
and pot was a thing you kept under your bed.

Back in the days of Listen with Mother, 
when neighbours were friendly and talked to each other. 
When cars were so rare you could play in the street. 
When Doctors made house calls and Police walked the beat.

Back in the days of Milligan's Goons, 
when butter was butter and songs all had tunes. 
It was dumplings for dinner and trifle for tea, 
and your annual break was a day by the sea.

Back in the days of Dixon's Dock Green, 
Crackerjack pens and Lyons ice cream. 
When children could freely wear National Health glasses, 
and teachers all stood at the FRONT of their classes.

Back in the days of rocking and reeling, 
when mobiles were things that you hung from the ceiling. When woodwork and pottery got taught in schools, 
and everyone dreamed of a win on the pools.

Back in the days when I was a lad, 
I can't help but smile for the fun that I had. 
Hopscotch and roller skates; snowballs to lob. 
Back in the days of tanners and bobs.

replied on 28/08/2019 08:39

Posted on 28/08/2019 08:16 by SteveL

Let's face it, back then most of us wouldn't have been alive to be posting on CT. (if it had existed) I had one grandparent  after 10 years old. My kids had 4 at 18. Life expectancy has improved so much and we can enjoy our old age.😀

Good poem though, thanks harry.

Posted on 28/08/2019 08:39

Life expectancy has improved so much 

Aye, if I had been born 40 years earlier I wouldn't have been alive now.wink

 

replied on 28/08/2019 09:02

Posted on 28/08/2019 07:39 by cyberyacht

Are food banks because some have spent their money on tattoos and designer dogs?

Posted on 28/08/2019 09:02

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Tinwheeler replied on 28/08/2019 09:31

Posted on 28/08/2019 07:39 by cyberyacht

Are food banks because some have spent their money on tattoos and designer dogs?

Posted on 28/08/2019 09:31

Our local food bank serves only those who have been referred by the likes of Social Services. As such, I am happy to donate without passing judgement on those who use it. 

replied on 28/08/2019 09:39

Posted on 28/08/2019 09:31 by Tinwheeler

Our local food bank serves only those who have been referred by the likes of Social Services. As such, I am happy to donate without passing judgement on those who use it. 

Posted on 28/08/2019 09:39

The user and all related content has been deleted

brue replied on 28/08/2019 09:48

Posted on 28/08/2019 09:48

My sister will be helping with the stock in a food bank today, they don't always know what the donations will be but the mix of volunteers and recipients is quite varied.

replied on 28/08/2019 10:08

Posted on 28/08/2019 09:39 by

Same here. Clients have to be referred. They get a food parcel with food for three days, to tide them over an emergency. More than happy to donate. Especially so during school holidays and at Christmas time when I like to put in a  few "treats".

Posted on 28/08/2019 10:08

I also donate from time to time. Usually boring stuff though like evap milk, tinned tuna, sweetcorn, tinned potatoes, baked beans.

My youngest daughter has little income and has two kiddies age 7 and 8. The small back garden is geared to producing food. She does have plenty of capital but most of this is in a series of 5 year investments now and has access to lumps of £10,000 4 times a year as bonds run to end of term with around £30k in more accessible accounts. 

She does not use food banks but does use a local caring cafe from time to time which provides a friendly atmosphere and cheap meals. Makes a change for the kids. She does however donate freebies that she obtains ob the web and buys some foods there which are supplied by local supermarkets and sold cheaply. 

brue replied on 28/08/2019 12:36

Posted on 28/08/2019 12:36

The big supermarkets donate all sorts of things but the food banks don't always know what that will be, it's a good system. There are many that suddenly find themselves in difficult circumstances and surplus food is a good way to help people through distressing times.

replied on 28/08/2019 12:54

Posted on 28/08/2019 12:54

When I think about it Brue a lot of the produce sold at the 'caring cafe' that I mentioned above comes from the local market traders. 

Takethedogalong replied on 28/08/2019 13:22

Posted on 28/08/2019 13:22

I cannot seriously believe that I live in a country that has to have in place food banks. Something, somewhere has gone very badly wrong. I have my thoughts, but they are not for on here.

Its a good little poem, but I hope we have progressed in all the right ways. Hope is a wonderful thing and needs sharing as much as possible.....😁

DavidKlyne replied on 28/08/2019 15:58

Posted on 28/08/2019 13:22 by Takethedogalong

I cannot seriously believe that I live in a country that has to have in place food banks. Something, somewhere has gone very badly wrong. I have my thoughts, but they are not for on here.

Its a good little poem, but I hope we have progressed in all the right ways. Hope is a wonderful thing and needs sharing as much as possible.....😁

Posted on 28/08/2019 15:58

Without straying into politics the solutions to the problems is quite simple but it rather depends whether "we" by which I mean all of us who are a bit better off are willing to sacrifice a little to sort out the problem. The main cause I believe is rooted in current housing policy where we have pulled the support rug out from under a lot of people. Housing costs, especially in the rented sector, are now so high that even with housing benefits many working people don't have a lot left after paying their rent which of course drives people to use food banks.

I was pondering the other day whether the house I managed to buy when we moved to MK if 1979 could I buy the same house in 2004 (when I retired) had I been starting out as a youngster on the wage I had at retirement and the answer was no. Even more modest houses would be out of reach. We have a couple of houses on our estate which are rented at £1000+ a month which perhaps illustrates the issue.

David

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