*Do You remember these?*

For those who grew up during the 60s and 70s in middle class India, here are
some things that you can identify with – at least I do!

1. Though you may not publicly own to this, you were very proud of your
first "Bellbottom" or your first "Maxi"or your first Apache jeans.
2. Phantom & Mandrake were your only true heroes. The brainy ones read
"Competition Success Review".
3. Your "Camlin" geometry box & Natraj/Flora pencil was your prized
possession.
4. The only "Holidays" you took were to go to your grandparents' or your
cousins' houses.
5. Ice-cream meant only - either an orange stick, a vanilla stick – or a
Choco Bar if you were better off than most.
6. You gave your neighbour’s phone number to others with a ‘c/o’ written
against it because you had booked yours only 7 years ago and were still
waiting for your number to come.
7. Your first family car (and the only one) was a Fiat or an Ambassador.
This often had to be pushed by the entire family to get going.
8. The glass windows in the back seats used to get stuck at the two-thirds
down level and used to irk the shit out of you! The window went down only if
your puny arm could manage the tacky rotary handle to pull it down. Locking
the door was easy. You just whacked the other tacky, non-rotary handle
downwards.
9. Your mom had stitched the weirdest lace curtains for all the windows of
the car. They were tied in the middle and if your dad was the
comfort-oriented kinds, you had a magnificent small fan upfront.
10. Your parents were proud owners of HMT watches by 1964. You "earned"
yours after SSC exams.
11. You have been to "Jumbo Circus"; have held your breath while the pretty
young thing in the glittery skirt did acrobatics, quite enjoyed the elephants
hitting football, the motorcyclist vrooming in the "Mautka Gola" and it was
politically okay to laugh your guts out at dwarfs hitting each others
bottoms!
12. You have at least once heard "Hawa Mahal" on the radio.
13. If you had a TV, by 1983, it was normal to expect the neighborhood to
gather around to watch the Chitrahaar or the Sunday movie. If you didn't
have a TV, you just went to a house that did. It mattered little if you knew
the owners or not.
14. Sometimes the owners of these TVs got very creative and got a bi or even
a tri-coloured anti-glare screen which they attached with two side clips
onto their Weston TVs. That confused the hell out of you!
15. Black & White TVs weren't so bad after all because cricket was played in
whites.
16. You thought your Dad rocked because you got your own (the family's; not
your own own!) colour TV when the Asian Games started in 1982. Everyone else
got the same idea as well and ever since, no one came over to your house and
you didn't go to anyone else's.
17. You dreaded the death of any political leader because of the mourning
they would announce on the TV. After all how much "Shastriya Sangeet" can a
kid take? Salma Sultana also didn't smile during the mourning.
18. You knew that "Indira Gandhi" was somebody really powerful and terribly
important. And that's all you needed to know.
19. The only "Gadgets" in the house were the TV, the Fridge and possibly a
mixer.
20. All the gadgets had to be duly covered with a crochet covers and
sometimes even with ingenious, custom-fit plastic covers.
21. Movies meant Rajesh Khanna or Amitabh Bachchan. Before the start of the
movie you always had to watch the obligatory "Newsreel".
22. You thought you were so rocking because you knew almost all the songs of
Abba and Boney M.
23. Your hormones went crazy when you heard "Disco Deewane" by Naziya Hassan
& Zoheb Hassan.
24. School teachers, your parents and even your neighbours could whack you
and it was all okay.
25. Photograph taking was a big thing. You were lucky if your family owned a
camera. The earliest one was box type “Rollyflex” camera, which can take 12
frames from a film roll.  To finish taking 12 exposures it took more than
two months. Then came the camera known as Yashica Electro 35. A reel of 36
exposures was valuable hence it justified the half hour preparation &
"setting" & the "posing" for each picture. Therefore, you have atleast one
family picture where everyone is holding their breath and standing at
attention!

And we were really happy then....see what new technology has brought you
to...no peace of mind, only pressure and stress!!

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