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April 29 2024 4.46am

your childhood Christmas

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View kingdowieonthewall's Profile kingdowieonthewall Flag Sussex, ex-Cronx. 14 Dec 22 10.14am Send a Private Message to kingdowieonthewall Add kingdowieonthewall as a friend

I thought it would be interesting to hear from people about their christmas experience, as a child, as I expect they will range from 50's through to 00's (poss even 40s ?)

I was born in 1960, Addiscombe, Croydon.
For those a lot younger to know, there were no supermarkets, the local high street was everything.
Your parents would place order to be collected xmas eve from butchers, bakers etc, the queues were very long!
Present wise, there was non of this OTT culture of have it all, just a coveted item (such as an action man or big airfix model) & a few small practical things(socks, bubble bath)
So ,still xmas eve after traipsing all morning with mum around the local shops in the snow(it was often a white xmas in 60s) you'd get home & keep out of the way.
(dad was usually working as he was on the Ambulances)
The xmas eve shop arrangements were pretty crucial as ALL business closed, many until the new year, so shops were closed a good 6-7 days, if you cocked up supplies you had only friends or family to borrow from.
My brother & I would be punted off to bed before the more adult TV shows started, such as Steptoe & son or possible a live 'carry on' special, we would sit at the top of stairs listening to the banter, but not understanding.
Then the big day, normally waking up way too early and being under strict orders not to get mum & dad up at 6am!
dinner was by the book, turkey, roasties, stuffing etc & xmas pud with custard or cream, hats from crackers at the table, drinks for adults onwards (we may be given a tot glass of stones ginger wine or there was this strange whisky hybrid , clan dew?)
Mum, who never drank usually, would have a Bols advocatt snowball or babycham.
Tv would be the big film or a morcambe & wise special.
Boxing day, more of the same, plus footy was on plus of course turkey sandwiches for the next few days
(Have a great Christmas everybody! I think we all need it this year)

Edited by kingdowieonthewall (14 Dec 2022 10.15am)

 


Kids,tired of being bothered by your pesky parents?
Then leave home, get a job & pay your own bills, while you still know everything.

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View mr. apollo's Profile mr. apollo Flag Somewhere in Switzerland 14 Dec 22 11.03am Send a Private Message to mr. apollo Add mr. apollo as a friend

Yep that about sums it up

 



Glad

All

Over

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View Nicholas91's Profile Nicholas91 Flag The Democratic Republic of Kent 14 Dec 22 12.01pm Send a Private Message to Nicholas91 Add Nicholas91 as a friend

A 90's version KDOTW - from Lewisham:

Christmas morning consisted of lying in bed anxiously, lived in a flat therefore any movement would be deemed as a pre-decent time wakening.

Present opening, bucks fizz and maybe even some ferrero roches for breakfast! Similar stance on presents, was primarily little stocking fillers, maybe some clothes etc before your 'big present' which you usually selected yourself from the Argos catalogue (my younger brother was far less aware of finances than I was so that always became an ordeal in explaining anything in three figures could only be 'just in' and if so would limit number of overall presents).

Being good Irish Catholics church was next on the agenda, where you'd eye up friends for their new clobber and maybe compare presents. A family anecdote is my younger brother aged about 7 throwing a tantrum as he was barred from wearing his Palace shin pads to church. Not much has changed there unfortunately.

Next would be a trip to Grandparents and maybe see a few other family members briefly before a return home to enjoy your new stuff, Dad inevitably having a few sherrys etc and falling asleep. Mum getting Xmas dinner ready. Typically would have family around ours for the dinner which I suspect was a very typical Xmas dinner (Pulling crackers, Turkey, cranberry sauce, pigs in blankets, stuffing, gravy, pudding etc) however we always had boiled bacon too.

Evening consisted of progressive inebriation for anyone aged over 13/14/15, board games, music etc etc. I say the evening, that usually carried on for a few days before a 5 day hangover for all beginning Jan 01.

Oooh I'm getting all exciteds's now haha

 


Now Zaha's got a bit of green grass ahead of him here... and finds Ambrose... not a bad effort!!!!

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View mezzer's Profile mezzer Flag Main Stand, Block F, Row 20 seat 1... 14 Dec 22 12.12pm Send a Private Message to mezzer Add mezzer as a friend

Nice thread.

I don't remember my 1st Christmas. I was born at 1.45 a.m. Christmas morning in 1959, at home, above a piano shop on the Brighton Road Purley, two doors down from the Orchid Ballroom where my Dad was bar manager and had to be called home from his busy Christmas Eve shift.

Sounds a bit modern-day Nativity Play-ish actually.

Always loved our Christmases. I always asked for a Palace shirt (occasionally got the shorts and socks as well) and my older brother always got that year's Eagle Annual. I was a bit crestfallen one year when I opened an empty box on Christmas Day, but cheered up when my Dad said it was an Action Man Deserter.

Always tried to instill the Magic of Christmas in my kids and it's great to see that being reproduced now with my young grandkids.

I was always allowed a Christmas drink (usually a sherry) and a Christmas cigarette. I've since put this down as having done me a great favour in that I hated smoking as a consequence and never got into the habit like a lot of my school mates. A 50% success rate is pretty good, as it didn't work in putting me off drinking in the slightest.

Happy Christmas everyone!

 


Living down here does have some advantages. At least you can see them cry.

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View Nicholas91's Profile Nicholas91 Flag The Democratic Republic of Kent 14 Dec 22 12.18pm Send a Private Message to Nicholas91 Add Nicholas91 as a friend

Originally posted by mezzer

Nice thread.

I don't remember my 1st Christmas. I was born at 1.45 a.m. Christmas morning in 1959, at home, above a piano shop on the Brighton Road Purley, two doors down from the Orchid Ballroom where my Dad was bar manager and had to be called home from his busy Christmas Eve shift.

Sounds a bit modern-day Nativity Play-ish actually.

Always loved our Christmases. I always asked for a Palace shirt (occasionally got the shorts and socks as well) and my older brother always got that year's Eagle Annual. I was a bit crestfallen one year when I opened an empty box on Christmas Day, but cheered up when my Dad said it was an Action Man Deserter.

Always tried to instill the Magic of Christmas in my kids and it's great to see that being reproduced now with my young grandkids.

I was always allowed a Christmas drink (usually a sherry) and a Christmas cigarette. I've since put this down as having done me a great favour in that I hated smoking as a consequence and never got into the habit like a lot of my school mates. A 50% success rate is pretty good, as it didn't work in putting me off drinking in the slightest.

Happy Christmas everyone!

Lovely post again Mezzer. It's warming me cockles all this!

On the Palace shirt, I hasten to mention that was very much my shoed-in secondary ask (beyond my 'big' present)!

All jokes aside, I still today find it odd (in my own mind of course) when I see people with new shirts at the beginning of the season as I align them so much with Xmas!

 


Now Zaha's got a bit of green grass ahead of him here... and finds Ambrose... not a bad effort!!!!

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View Badger11's Profile Badger11 Flag Beckenham 14 Dec 22 12.23pm Send a Private Message to Badger11 Add Badger11 as a friend

Christmas Eve my old work colleague Jacob Marley comes around with 3 of his mates I tell them to piss off.

 


One more point

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View kingdowieonthewall's Profile kingdowieonthewall Flag Sussex, ex-Cronx. 14 Dec 22 1.12pm Send a Private Message to kingdowieonthewall Add kingdowieonthewall as a friend

Originally posted by mezzer

Nice thread.

I don't remember my 1st Christmas. I was born at 1.45 a.m. Christmas morning in 1959, at home, above a piano shop on the Brighton Road Purley, two doors down from the Orchid Ballroom where my Dad was bar manager and had to be called home from his busy Christmas Eve shift.

Sounds a bit modern-day Nativity Play-ish actually.

Always loved our Christmases. I always asked for a Palace shirt (occasionally got the shorts and socks as well) and my older brother always got that year's Eagle Annual. I was a bit crestfallen one year when I opened an empty box on Christmas Day, but cheered up when my Dad said it was an Action Man Deserter.

Always tried to instill the Magic of Christmas in my kids and it's great to see that being reproduced now with my young grandkids.

I was always allowed a Christmas drink (usually a sherry) and a Christmas cigarette. I've since put this down as having done me a great favour in that I hated smoking as a consequence and never got into the habit like a lot of my school mates. A 50% success rate is pretty good, as it didn't work in putting me off drinking in the slightest.

Happy Christmas everyone!

I had a Don Rogers palace shirt, the material was what you might call traditional stiff cotton, so it was a bugger getting your wee head through the small, unstretchy neck on the shirt

 


Kids,tired of being bothered by your pesky parents?
Then leave home, get a job & pay your own bills, while you still know everything.

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View Teddy Eagle's Profile Teddy Eagle Flag 14 Dec 22 1.24pm Send a Private Message to Teddy Eagle Add Teddy Eagle as a friend


I remember string bags of mixed nuts which were all quite tasteless, Brazils were hard to crack, and dates, either Eat Me or ones with a camel on the box, they had a plastic spike to get them out which was always sticky. I'm pretty sure that despite making an annual appearance they got slung out every year with one gone.

 

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View mezzer's Profile mezzer Flag Main Stand, Block F, Row 20 seat 1... 14 Dec 22 1.46pm Send a Private Message to mezzer Add mezzer as a friend

Originally posted by kingdowieonthewall

I had a Don Rogers palace shirt, the material was what you might call traditional stiff cotton, so it was a bugger getting your wee head through the small, unstretchy neck on the shirt

Probably explains why a goal celebration back in the day was a firm handshake and congratulatory nod rather than all this taking your shirt off malarkey today.

 


Living down here does have some advantages. At least you can see them cry.

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View becky's Profile becky Flag over the moon 14 Dec 22 2.51pm Send a Private Message to becky Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add becky as a friend

Originally posted by Teddy Eagle


I remember string bags of mixed nuts which were all quite tasteless, Brazils were hard to crack, and dates, either Eat Me or ones with a camel on the box, they had a plastic spike to get them out which was always sticky. I'm pretty sure that despite making an annual appearance they got slung out every year with one gone.

We had those every year along with a cellophane packet of dried figs, where the cellophane always split and the figs got even more dried.

Christmas day, lunch was just our family but then the rest came round for 'high tea' and card games in the evening.

One lovely tradition my parents had was that any children sleeping over (top to tailed in the beds!) would be allocated a 'votive' type candle on the mantelpiece. These were lit at about 7.30 - 8pm, and when your candle went out it was off to bed and no argument. There was a lot of dodgy stuff went on to sabotage other people's candles and be the last one up!

 


A stairway to Heaven and a Highway to Hell give some indication of expected traffic numbers

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View Midlands Eagle's Profile Midlands Eagle Flag 14 Dec 22 3.51pm Send a Private Message to Midlands Eagle Add Midlands Eagle as a friend

Originally posted by Teddy Eagle


I remember string bags of mixed nuts which were all quite tasteless, Brazils were hard to crack, and dates, either Eat Me or ones with a camel on the box, they had a plastic spike to get them out which was always sticky. I'm pretty sure that despite making an annual appearance they got slung out every year with one gone.

I still bought those annually despite no-one ever eating them so a few years ago I just put the unopened box in the loft with the decorations and brought them out again the following year

 

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View JRW2's Profile JRW2 Flag Dulwich 14 Dec 22 4.11pm Send a Private Message to JRW2 Add JRW2 as a friend

Originally posted by kingdowieonthewall


Mum, who never drank usually, would have a Bols advocatt snowball or babycham.

(Have a great Christmas everybody! I think we all need it this year)

Yes, my mother, her mother and my father were teetotal. He had a small glass of Cydrax (how that stayed on the market as long as it did is a mystery), mum had a snowball, and nan had a port and lemon (and if the ratio of lemonade to port wasn't more than 10:1, she would complain that it was "a bit strong".

Where did it all go wrong for me?!

 

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