Only those of us who lived this far can truly understand the happiness of simplicity, or the joy of lifelong friendships that weren't solicited on some chat room. We grew up in a post-war society when family was everything and friendship was earned. Manners were expected, as was discipline when a wrong must be made right.
Don't mistake me: there are a lot of beautiful women today who go to great lengths to look amazing through surgery, but back then, natural beauty was in the lady herself. The way she carried herself and the confidence she had in her clothing choices. Like June Cleaver on the Leave It to Beaver television show, always wearing a simple dress, high heels, an apron, and a stylish hairdo.
It was a time when Saturday night meant dancing at a large dance hall with a live band that played all the day's hits. No screaming guitars or fireworks, just couples in love, others looking for it. It was always crowded as a slow dance brought couples closer and the smell of perfume and aftershave collided in mid-air.
Those days of courting a girl and asking her father for permission to marry her made more than one guy gulp his words as he came face-to-face with a father's stern warning: have her home by eleven, not one minute later.
Friday nights at the drive-in movies meant some heavy kissing, but no meant no, and stop meant stop as she fixed her lipstick and brushed her hair, asking him to get her some popcorn and a Coke. which he did, talking under his breath as he walked away, knowing even first base wasn't going to happen.
Back then, after the war, men who served came home to offers of new jobs in many factories that had been converted to the war effort, now producing steel, paper, and dozens of other things the country needed to rebuild. Others dressed in business attire searched for jobs in the business sector, where many succeeded. New houses sprang up like tulips on a late spring day, creating row after row of cookie-cutter houses nestled together in what was named subdivisions.
Backyard swimming pools and Sunday picnics, brand-new automobiles proudly shown off as the men gathered around the owner, explaining every little detail. While inside, a new bride shows off all the modern conveniences, like an electric coffee pot and an automatic ice maker in the freezer. And her most prized possession was the washer and dryer that made her life so much easier.
From there, as the years passed and things began to change, life seemed to get easier, maybe even too easy. More gadgets that saved time and less time with family. Although many of us tried to go along with the changes, we also tried to keep certain traditions alive for the next generations.
Then everything changed at lightning speed as the computer arrived in our world. A magical machine capable of solving complex mathematics and allowing scientists to explore new horizons they never could before. In the scope of things, every home had a computer, making schoolwork much easier and shopping possible without going to a store. Video games were designed, and every kid in America and around the world would soon have handheld controllers in their hands as zombie-like looks replaced backyard games, ushering in the age of obesity.
But I realized in time that if I was going to live in this new age, I'd have to adapt to certain things. My grandson did his best to show me how to send emails, browse, and Google, and even hooked me up with a dating app for seniors looking for love. That backfired when I saw the picture he posted on the site, taken when I was 20 years younger. Needless to say, the first meeting didn't go very well.
I'm 72 years old now and content with living the way I always have. I like the simple life of opening a lady's door, and I always walk on the outside in case of a passing car going through a puddle. On occasion, I put on my best suit, splash on some Aqua Velva, and head to the old dance floor, still standing with a thousand stories. With any luck, I'll ask a lady of my age to have a dance or two.