View Full Version : Moments of Nostalgia
Pretty Boy
19-01-2025, 05:18 PM
I was flicking through the channels tonight and landed up on Ski Sunday. I was vaguely aware it was still on but I haven't seen it in years. It hit me with a wave of nostalgia. I used to hate it when I was young because it signalled the weekend was nearly over. Late Sunday afternoon, you knew it was tea, bath and bed soon. I felt the same about Heartbeat. Earlier in the day though was Football Italia which was a highlight of any weekend. I could easily rattle of a Milan team from about 1992-2001 easier than I could name any Scottish Premiership club other than Hibs now.
A few days ago I was at my parents, same house I grew up in, and had to walk to the local Tesco. It's built on the site of an old field we used to play football in and I was quite melancholy thinking of the huge games or football we played there. 10 half time, 20 the winner if you had enough for a full game. World cup headers and volleys if there was only a handful. Got me thinking there must have been a last time we all played there, I doubt anyone knew it would be the case but that was it. Silly thing to get sentimental about really but all the same.
Finally on Friday night I made mince and doughballs for dinner. First time in ages. Again when I was young I went to my granny and grandads for tea every Thursday. Mince was often on the menu and as hard as I have tried I can never quite make it the way my granny did. I get close but something is never quite right. I'd pay all the money in the world to have one more plate of that mince on a Thursday night.
Avoiding the nasty undercurrent that is often present on social media nostalgia places does anyone else ever have these moments where memories feel almost tangible? I often find it very bittersweet. Anyone else have any favourite memories of things you used to do, things you used to be able to buy etc?
Bridge hibs
19-01-2025, 05:41 PM
We lived free as children, my childhood other than broken parent wise we still lived our lives as one big adventure. My household was toxic to say the least and I think I spent more hours outdoors than I did indoors, unless when staying at my Nana and Grandads house most of the summer.
Leith was amazing as a kid, industrial, dirty and dangerous but so much to do and so many derelict buildings from factories to tenements to pubs to explore, Leith had it all.
Arthurs Seat and Duddingston golf course held many great memories, the golf course in particular where the minute you walked off the beaten track the noise of the road traffic ceased, it was a new world of smells, colours and sounds, as well as giving you all that it gave you a history lesson from the secluded mansion house hotel to the location of the war time Nissan huts to the water lades that served Duddingston mills in days of yore.
Arthurs seat where we would spend endless hours rolling about on the hills or trying to climb some steep inclines, my Nanas dog chasing the sheep and us getting chased by the “parkies”
Dicing with danger trying to navigate the ice on St Margarets or Dunsapie Lochs or the risk of breaking our ankles doing the popular burn jumps.
Searching for scrap bikes in the Niddrie burn to build our own bikes or for old prams to salvage the wheels and springs to assemble our guiders. A summer never went by without a 15 aside game of football and then home at tea time to await the chippy van followed by Arcaris or Johnnys ice cream vans.
If I could turn back time to the good old days.
Pretty Boy
19-01-2025, 05:49 PM
Another one was usually about this time of year my parents coming home with a holiday brochure or 5 and sitting with the neighbours we went away with looking at hotels then flicking to the back to see what airports were served and what the flight times were😅😅😅😅 Then going into an actual shop to book it.
It's about 4 clicks online to book a holiday now.
I was flicking through the channels tonight and landed up on Ski Sunday. I was vaguely aware it was still on but I haven't seen it in years. It hit me with a wave of nostalgia. I used to hate it when I was young because it signalled the weekend was nearly over. Late Sunday afternoon, you knew it was tea, bath and bed soon. I felt the same about Heartbeat. Earlier in the day though was Football Italia which was a highlight of any weekend. I could easily rattle of a Milan team from about 1992-2001 easier than I could name any Scottish Premiership club other than Hibs now.
A few days ago I was at my parents, same house I grew up in, and had to walk to the local Tesco. It's built on the site of an old field we used to play football in and I was quite melancholy thinking of the huge games or football we played there. 10 half time, 20 the winner if you had enough for a full game. World cup headers and volleys if there was only a handful. Got me thinking there must have been a last time we all played there, I doubt anyone knew it would be the case but that was it. Silly thing to get sentimental about really but all the same.
Finally on Friday night I made mince and doughballs for dinner. First time in ages. Again when I was young I went to my granny and grandads for tea every Thursday. Mince was often on the menu and as hard as I have tried I can never quite make it the way my granny did. I get close but something is never quite right. I'd pay all the money in the world to have one more plate of that mince on a Thursday night.
Avoiding the nasty undercurrent that is often present on social media nostalgia places does anyone else ever have these moments where memories feel almost tangible? I often find it very bittersweet. Anyone else have any favourite memories of things you used to do, things you used to be able to buy etc?
The high school I went to is long gone, a new one built on the original ones playing fields, then the old one knocked down and new playing fields put there.
My daughter’s swimming lessons are in the new school, every week when we’re there I get loads of memories going through my head. My daughter loves running up and down a hill which is where the goals were that we always used to play football at (pitch was on a slope so one end was elevated to keep it level), the pool is on top of what was once another football pitch, the rugby pitch, and where they painted the running track in the summer months. Those days don’t seem all that long ago, yet they’re circa 30 years ago now, happy and sad at the same time when those memories are running strong
Bridge hibs
19-01-2025, 06:00 PM
Catalogues, I remember my Aunty used to have a Kays catalogue which was about twice the thickness of a phone book, remember them ?
I must admit I am partial to grabbing a Screwfix Direct or Toolstation catalogue, Im power tool mad and its my version of a “scuddy mag” where I drool over table saws or flick a page and see a healthy set of diamond tipped drill bits 🤣
Smartie
19-01-2025, 06:12 PM
I have to watch my relationship with nostalgia as it can lead me to unhappy places. At my worst I have a tendency to wallow.
It’s funny because there are some things that I loved at the time but don’t feel remotely nostalgic about - I’m mainly thinking of stuff like cramming as many bottles of cheap alcopop as possible down my neck at student night. After having eventually been at Uni for 7 years, whilst my boozy, young, free and single days were lots and lots of fun, I wince when I think of them rather than pine for them.
One thing I’d maybe go for… I was going to a family funeral a couple of years ago. For about 10 minutes, before we headed up to the funeral in separate cars, it was just my mum and dad, my brothers and myself in my mum and dad’s house. No partners, no kids, no grandparents, just the five of us as it had been so much growing up. My mum commented on it having not happened for such a long time. I’d probably choose a run of the mill dinner, just the five of us. Piss taking, bullying, correcting grammatical slip ups or destroying anyone if they said anything stupid, stealing chips off each other… it was a great training ground for all sorts environments we’ve found ourselves in since. Obviously we still see each other but the dynamic is very different with my parents being older, the 3 of us having wives / partners and there being 6 kids between the 3 of us.
The problem with nostalgia imo is that it can stop you appreciating the stuff under your nose that you’ll be nostalgic about later. I find that the more I make an effort to appreciate something at the time then the less I feel the need to pine for it later. Kids growing up, growing out of outfits and stopping doing things is an emotional rollercoaster though.
Jones28
19-01-2025, 06:22 PM
I get that, it’s weird to think that there must have been a last time you did something that felt so normal. The last time you played football with your mates, the last time you went on a night out to a particular place or went drinking in a random spot that you always used to end up. Before we were going up town for clubs etc we always ended up at platinum point in the park. When we started going up town it was Hive or bust most of the time.
I spent a lot of my summers in East Lothian at my grandparents. Had some great times, first proper girlfriend, football for hours, den making, skateboarding, looking for half finished fags.
Grandparents both dead, contact with anyone I knew at the time long gone, everything about Innerwick seems smaller now. The last time I was at the park or the school was with my own bairns.
It’s weird, being 16/17 was an era of firsts but it was also a lot of last times too, those last times just felt less important at the time.
Pretty Boy
19-01-2025, 07:13 PM
I have to watch my relationship with nostalgia as it can lead me to unhappy places. At my worst I have a tendency to wallow.
It’s funny because there are some things that I loved at the time but don’t feel remotely nostalgic about - I’m mainly thinking of stuff like cramming as many bottles of cheap alcopop as possible down my neck at student night. After having eventually been at Uni for 7 years, whilst my boozy, young, free and single days were lots and lots of fun, I wince when I think of them rather than pine for them.
One thing I’d maybe go for… I was going to a family funeral a couple of years ago. For about 10 minutes, before we headed up to the funeral in separate cars, it was just my mum and dad, my brothers and myself in my mum and dad’s house. No partners, no kids, no grandparents, just the five of us as it had been so much growing up. My mum commented on it having not happened for such a long time. I’d probably choose a run of the mill dinner, just the five of us. Piss taking, bullying, correcting grammatical slip ups or destroying anyone if they said anything stupid, stealing chips off each other… it was a great training ground for all sorts environments we’ve found ourselves in since. Obviously we still see each other but the dynamic is very different with my parents being older, the 3 of us having wives / partners and there being 6 kids between the 3 of us.
The problem with nostalgia imo is that it can stop you appreciating the stuff under your nose that you’ll be nostalgic about later. I find that the more I make an effort to appreciate something at the time then the less I feel the need to pine for it later. Kids growing up, growing out of outfits and stopping doing things is an emotional rollercoaster though.
I agree with your last paragraph.
I think there is a danger with nostalgia, or overly rose tinted nostalgia at any rate, of pining for a golden age that never really existed. I think we often forget that our brains filter out a lot of the bad stuff to leave us with the mistaken belief it was always the best of times. It's why so many people talk as though it was sunny every day of summer in their childhood.
I appreciate my life now and there are loads of things I look back on and wince; like you I don't really feel any warmth towards my student days. I enjoyed part time jobs I did then and loved the guys I played football with but the student nights out and whatever leave me cold.
There are odd moments though when a wave of nostalgia just hits me though. Today being one of them hence the thread😅
DaveF
19-01-2025, 07:40 PM
I took a walk (last year) around where I grew up. All totally changed now as it's been demolished and rebuilt but the burn we used play in / jump over was still there - albeit full of rubbish and with no water.
The football pitch at the high school was there but totally overgrown, though the rusty goals were still standing. Happy memories of scoring a barrowload of goals on it - everyone of them probably miles offside 😀
The fields which don't have housing are empty. They no longer have turnips to steal or hay bales to jump around in.
One thing I don't do so much now but did back then, is listen to the radio. I remember football being on radio 2 back on the day and used to listen to it in the kitchen with my Dad.
One that sticks in my head was when Colin Harris scored in a Hibs win at Ibrox in the early to mid 80's. A bit random!
He's here!
19-01-2025, 08:19 PM
I was flicking through the channels tonight and landed up on Ski Sunday. I was vaguely aware it was still on but I haven't seen it in years. It hit me with a wave of nostalgia. I used to hate it when I was young because it signalled the weekend was nearly over. Late Sunday afternoon, you knew it was tea, bath and bed soon. I felt the same about Heartbeat. Earlier in the day though was Football Italia which was a highlight of any weekend. I could easily rattle of a Milan team from about 1992-2001 easier than I could name any Scottish Premiership club other than Hibs now.
A few days ago I was at my parents, same house I grew up in, and had to walk to the local Tesco. It's built on the site of an old field we used to play football in and I was quite melancholy thinking of the huge games or football we played there. 10 half time, 20 the winner if you had enough for a full game. World cup headers and volleys if there was only a handful. Got me thinking there must have been a last time we all played there, I doubt anyone knew it would be the case but that was it. Silly thing to get sentimental about really but all the same.
Finally on Friday night I made mince and doughballs for dinner. First time in ages. Again when I was young I went to my granny and grandads for tea every Thursday. Mince was often on the menu and as hard as I have tried I can never quite make it the way my granny did. I get close but something is never quite right. I'd pay all the money in the world to have one more plate of that mince on a Thursday night.
Avoiding the nasty undercurrent that is often present on social media nostalgia places does anyone else ever have these moments where memories feel almost tangible? I often find it very bittersweet. Anyone else have any favourite memories of things you used to do, things you used to be able to buy etc?
There were a few programmes like that. Bullseye and Songs of Praise are the ones I associate with that Sunday evening gloom. Scotsport was something to cling to, although the real kick in the guts was when for whatever reason they weren't actually showing football highlights and were instead live from some indoor bowls event or curling. You might has well just have sent me into school there and then.
He's here!
19-01-2025, 08:22 PM
I took a walk (last year) around where I grew up. All totally changed now as it's been demolished and rebuilt but the burn we used play in / jump over was still there - albeit full of rubbish and with no water.
The football pitch at the high school was there but totally overgrown, though the rusty goals were still standing. Happy memories of scoring a barrowload of goals on it - everyone of them probably miles offside 😀
The fields which don't have housing are empty. They no longer have turnips to steal or hay bales to jump around in.
One thing I don't do so much now but did back then, is listen to the radio. I remember football being on radio 2 back on the day and used to listen to it in the kitchen with my Dad.
One that sticks in my head was when Colin Harris scored in a Hibs win at Ibrox in the early to mid 80's. A bit random!
I've also got a powerful memory of that one, driving back from somewhere with my dad and the car radio relaying news of that late winner. Brilliant.
Rangers feature heavily in my radio memories come to think of it. The 79 Scottish Cup final replays plus the away leg of our 85 Skol Cup semi-final win at Ibrox. The former had me in tears, the latter almost too wrung out to be happy!
Jim44
19-01-2025, 10:18 PM
Some of my most nostalgic moments relate back to my primary school days. I was born and brought up in Leith in the 1950s and I went to Victoria Primary in Newhaven, where I spent lots of time with my cousins around the harbour and fish market. I’ve been away from Edinburgh for nearly 50 years, but occasionally drive through Newhaven on family visits etc. It always brings back fond and vivid memories.
matty_f
19-01-2025, 10:39 PM
Had a real moment of nostalgia on Christmas Day, I was loading the car, getting ready to head over to see parents and in-laws when two young lads came round the corner on what were clearly brand new Christmas present bikes.
I immediately saw myself in my old house at the Jewel, finally being allowed to use the mountain bike that had been in the dining room in the days leading up to Christmas, and getting it out for a shot at the earliest opportunity.
I agree with the poster above who mentioned trying to appreciate the here and now, I do think there’s room for those happy memories though.
Itsnoteasy
19-01-2025, 11:33 PM
I've also got a powerful memory of that one, driving back from somewhere with my dad and the car radio relaying news of that late winner. Brilliant.
Rangers feature heavily in my radio memories come to think of it. The 79 Scottish Cup final replays plus the away leg of our 85 Skol Cup semi-final win at Ibrox. The former had me in tears, the latter almost too wrung out to be happy!
85 cup game at Ibrox. Vaguely remember the bus windows getting tanned in after the game. Biggest Hibs support I've ever seen at Ibrox
Jones28
20-01-2025, 05:51 AM
There were a few programmes like that. Bullseye and Songs of Praise are the ones I associate with that Sunday evening gloom. Scotsport was something to cling to, although the real kick in the guts was when for whatever reason they weren't actually showing football highlights and were instead live from some indoor bowls event or curling. You might has well just have sent me into school there and then.
Antiques Roadshow always did that for me. Signalled the end of the weekend and that another week was here.
Alfiembra
20-01-2025, 08:17 AM
Got lots of childhood memories that pop up now and then, but the most regular one for me is driving past Wester Hailes High School which I pass on a daily basis. I spent my entire apprenticeship working in the consulting engineers office back in the early 70’s on that school learning to draw and eventually working on the site as the school was being built. Half of it has now been demolished and new buildings going up in its place. It’s mostly feelings of sadness knowing that something I was so keen and interested in as a young lad starting out at work and put all my efforts into at the time has now served it’s purpose and is gone forever.
HUTCHYHIBBY
20-01-2025, 09:35 AM
I can remember when I was a kid and whenever we passed Meadowbank House that my mum would tell me that it was the bad boys home and if I didn't behave that's where I would end up, started working there when I was 17, left in 2002, due to start back there again next Monday. Actually feels a bit weird.
danhibees1875
20-01-2025, 01:53 PM
The social media algorithm at play here and combining with reading this thread earlier - Facebook showed me a 2-day old post from "The football community" of the away end (behind the goals) toilets at Tannadice.
It must be 20 years since I was last there, but they've not changed - or probably been cleaned - since then. Took me right back. Of all the places.
Warning - NSFW:
https://www.facebook.com/share/159z8kGnbZ/
I guess the wider nostalgia there was following Hibs home and most away games through 2004-09. A time when a game away to United would be the most important thing to me all week. I could reel off the remaining fixture list, had the line ups sorted, and couldn't wait to knock back my pre game Irn Bru's (for Tannadice, I remember a pub with trolls* and a wall clock that had a second hand that rotated smoothly rather than ticking each second away).
*Troll dolls - No offence to United fans, but from my experience of following home and away they seemed to have the ugliest support, but would be harsh to wait 20 years and call them trolls for it now.
overdrive
20-01-2025, 02:52 PM
A Hibs related one that we were talking about on New Years Day. Getting taken to the pub before/after a game. It would be my dad and his mates and one of his mate's son who was a couple of years older than me. It was originally the Loch Inn then when it dwindled to just my dad and his mate with his son, it moved to the Lea Rig which was near our house. We'd play pool but needed to be away from the pool table and sat a particular table by a certain time post-match, though as the other end of the bar had go-go dancers :greengrin
Not sure my mum realised about the go-go dancers until I mentioned it on NYD :greengrin. My wife was surprised even at me getting taken into a pub at an early age when at the football as it was different to her experiences of going the football when young (and she wasn't as young as I was when this started), albeit it was Ibrox her and her dad went to and they generally drove through.
Got us talking more generally about how pubs used to have go-go dancers in them - something you wouldn't really see now other than at a designated strip bar.
Paulie Walnuts
20-01-2025, 03:00 PM
A Hibs related one that we were talking about on New Years Day. Getting taken to the pub before/after a game. It would be my dad and his mates and one of his mate's son who was a couple of years older than me. It was originally the Loch Inn then when it dwindled to just my dad and his mate with his son, it moved to the Lea Rig which was near our house. We'd play pool but needed to be away from the pool table and sat a particular table by a certain time post-match, though as the other end of the bar had go-go dancers :greengrin
Not sure my mum realised about the go-go dancers until I mentioned it on NYD :greengrin. My wife was surprised even at me getting taken into a pub at an early age when at the football as it was different to her experiences of going the football when young (and she wasn't as young as I was when this started), albeit it was Ibrox her and her dad went to and they generally drove through.
Got us talking more generally about how pubs used to have go-go dancers in them - something you wouldn't really see now other than at a designated strip bar.
Was there not a pub down the share that had go-go dancers and one was attacked by an exotic cat that was also kept at the pub? I mean now that I’m writing it I’m presuming it was an urban myth :greengrin
Bridge hibs
20-01-2025, 03:12 PM
Was there not a pub down the share that had go-go dancers and one was attacked by an exotic cat that was also kept at the pub? I mean now that I’m writing it I’m presuming it was an urban myth :greengrinYes its a true storey, happened at Fairleys bar around the 70s, its where Gulianos is situated now at the shore.
overdrive
20-01-2025, 04:43 PM
Yes its a true storey, happened at Fairleys bar around the 70s, its where Gulianos is situated now at the shore.
Yeah we talked about that story at New Year too as I’d read about it. Not been Gulianos for years, though. It’s a bar called Hemingway’s now.
Pretty Boy
20-01-2025, 06:14 PM
A Hibs related one that we were talking about on New Years Day. Getting taken to the pub before/after a game. It would be my dad and his mates and one of his mate's son who was a couple of years older than me. It was originally the Loch Inn then when it dwindled to just my dad and his mate with his son, it moved to the Lea Rig which was near our house. We'd play pool but needed to be away from the pool table and sat a particular table by a certain time post-match, though as the other end of the bar had go-go dancers :greengrin
Not sure my mum realised about the go-go dancers until I mentioned it on NYD :greengrin. My wife was surprised even at me getting taken into a pub at an early age when at the football as it was different to her experiences of going the football when young (and she wasn't as young as I was when this started), albeit it was Ibrox her and her dad went to and they generally drove through.
Got us talking more generally about how pubs used to have go-go dancers in them - something you wouldn't really see now other than at a designated strip bar.
I had two football pub experiences. The pub before the game with Hibs and pub after the game if I went to watch my dad play.
My grandad was a Tamsons man so it was into the back room. Coke and crisps and sit in the corner. My mum always said it was a big improvement on her days with him when she was a child, for her it was pavement outside with juice and crisps. With my dad it was Leslie's Bar (still close to my favourite pub in Edinburgh). Seat in the back snug next to the fire, coke and crisps and then the big basket of pies got passed round. Trips to watch the TV above the toilet door which had the vidiprinter on showing the FT results coming in. The occasional bribe from my dad to tell my mum we 'just missed the 5 so had to wait for the next one' so he could get another pint in. We always got in about 4.30 and it was rammed until well into the evening.
Mon Dieu4
21-01-2025, 10:21 AM
When I was a kid and the Dads went to the pub before a game we were all left outside and mainly played football in the street with a crushed can
WoreTheGreen
21-01-2025, 05:19 PM
I can remember when I was a kid and whenever we passed Meadowbank House that my mum would tell me that it was the bad boys home and if I didn't behave that's where I would end up, started working there when I was 17, left in 2002, due to start back there again next Monday. Actually feels a bit weird.
Getting driven by a angry dad to Doctor Guthries boys home and getting
threatened “one more time and you’re going in there “
Jones28
22-01-2025, 10:38 AM
The smell of a pub always takes me back to the Hopetoun which was our pre-match boozer of choice. Always got a seat, usually some lunch and the occasional illicit sip of lager.
It was a good pub in it's day. Don't know when it closed down but I drove past it and all of a sudden it was a Co-op.
Nothing does it more for me than a smell.
I was at a family event a few years ago and there was a lady who was a cousin of my granny who'd passed away the year before. She had the exact same smell when I went to give her a hug, it was absolutely bizarre. They had a passing resemblance to one another but they smelled the same, and it wasn't a perfume either. I could have been 4 years old giving my granny a hug again.
Bridge hibs
22-01-2025, 11:10 AM
Walking past pubs when I was a kid and the smell of beer, just doesnt seem to be the same now.
Getting dragged kicking and screaming to the barbers from my Dad for a “baldy” that wasnt the worst of it though, I had bilateral **** off coos licks that resembled horns and at school everytime I walked past someone they went mooooo 😖
BSEJVT
22-01-2025, 04:20 PM
Great thread
I think one that always gets me is around my maternal grandfather.
He smoked a pipe and smoked Golden Virginia in it.
He died suddenly in 1970.
I never smelled Golden Virginia again until I was at High School (1974 onwards)
I remember walking down Brighton Place past a bus stop and a a guy at the bus stop was smoking it.
I was about 10 yards past him when it registered and remember turning back to the bus stop to check it wasn't my granddad as until then he was the only person I had known to use it.
I knew it couldn't be even that but couldn't stop myself checking
Silky
24-01-2025, 09:09 PM
Love this thread! Grew up in Restalrig and I remember looking out the attic window of the house to see if the floodlights were on at Easter Road and, if they were, going in for my mate and running up to get into the ground. Used to go to any match which was on, reserves, youth team, a thing called, I think, Reserve League East or something, any excuse to go up. Once got to be a ball boy in the old terracing in a midweek reserve game. I was on that side by myself and I'm sure the players kept booting the ball as high and far as possible so I had to keep running to get it! :greengrin.
Also remember playing football in the old "dump" behind the old terracing at ER, then running along the walkway to get home. Every time I walk to the ground now with my son and we pass the new flats at the butterfly, it brings back memories.
Then there was being sent to the newsagents on a Saturday night to get the Pink. When it arrived, I'd have to take it to the Bottom Shop so dad could check his coupon before I went back up the hill! Good times.
ErinGoBraghHFC
24-01-2025, 11:58 PM
The high school I went to is long gone, a new one built on the original ones playing fields, then the old one knocked down and new playing fields put there.
My daughter’s swimming lessons are in the new school, every week when we’re there I get loads of memories going through my head. My daughter loves running up and down a hill which is where the goals were that we always used to play football at (pitch was on a slope so one end was elevated to keep it level), the pool is on top of what was once another football pitch, the rugby pitch, and where they painted the running track in the summer months. Those days don’t seem all that long ago, yet they’re circa 30 years ago now, happy and sad at the same time when those memories are running strong
I cut my foot on the bottom of the swimming pool of the old High School when I was a bairn. My experience of attending the new school was decent enough, the pitches aren’t up to scratch though (unless they’ve been upgraded since I left). Used to love nipping out the gate on a free period for a walk around Dechmont Law and a “fag” with my pals, definitely made the rest of the day more entertaining. Liked a scotch pie from Morrisons (a mind when I was Safeway as well mate don’t worry[emoji16]) for my lunch and for some reason having to dodge the older boys launching bits of Morrisons saver chocolate at your head.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
BSEJVT
25-01-2025, 06:14 AM
Love this thread! Grew up in Restalrig and I remember looking out the attic window of the house to see if the floodlights were on at Easter Road and, if they were, going in for my mate and running up to get into the ground. Used to go to any match which was on, reserves, youth team, a thing called, I think, Reserve League East or something, any excuse to go up. Once got to be a ball boy in the old terracing in a midweek reserve game. I was on that side by myself and I'm sure the players kept booting the ball as high and far as possible so I had to keep running to get it! :greengrin.
Also remember playing football in the old "dump" behind the old terracing at ER, then running along the walkway to get home. Every time I walk to the ground now with my son and we pass the new flats at the butterfly, it brings back memories.
Then there was being sent to the newsagents on a Saturday night to get the Pink. When it arrived, I'd have to take it to the Bottom Shop so dad could check his coupon before I went back up the hill! Good times.
I remember getting sent out for the Pink every Saturday Night then pouring over every detail in it when my dad was finished with it.
My recollection is that street lighting was much worse in the late 60's early 70's and I remember running up the middle of the road shouting my head off so that if someone grabbed me in the dark someone would have noticed the noise stopping and would maybe do something about it!
When I was wee there were maybe a dozen cars parked in a street that would now take maybe a couple of hundred (Marlborough Street Portobello)
The world was a very different place back then
Bridge hibs
25-01-2025, 07:45 AM
I dont know if this is nostalgic or just absolutely terrifying. For all the fun we had growing up in industrial Leith there was one incident that I kept to myself all through my childhood and adulthood, even my Mum and Dad didnt know about it, in fact it still sends a shiver down my spine thinking about it.
Myself and my friend Eddie Sutherland decided to thumb a lift up the road from outside the Womans missionary (now the Malmasion hotel) by passing lorry drivers as they exited the dock gates, the plan was one of us would jump in the lorry and the other would race the lorry up to the lights at Commercial St.
My mate Eddie got cold feet when a lorry stopped so I jumped in, the driver reached over and locked the passenger door, I was naive and just thought it was for safety, however things suddenly became more frightening, initially stopping at the red I was waving to my pal and then attempted to get out but in a panic I couldnt unlock the door.
The driver then turned left and I remember him laughing as I became panic stricken and started kicking and streaming to get out. The driver then slowed down due to traffic I think and then I remember him shouting something as he reached over and unlocked the door and then I bailed at around where the Moray Arms/Pond pub was.
For years it sent shivers down my spine and I tried to console myself and convince myself that the lorry driver was just having a laugh and there was no ulterior motive, thankfully I never found out. 🥲
Pretty Boy
25-01-2025, 07:57 AM
The Pink was really quite an amazing feat when you think about it, particularly as it was the days before widespread email, texting and video calls.
Not only did it have reports from the Hibs and Hearts games but you would have a full page summary of the East of Scotland League and results and reports from local rugby matches as well. You sometimes got the odd L-L on the scores page but for the most part it was comprehensive. Always remember it had the pools table down the side of the results page as well.
Often they were in my local chippy bang on 6pm, we could leave the game and I'd be told to jump out the car, run in and pick up a Pink and get a 10p mixture with the change. You'd have a full report of the game before even getting home. It sometimes takes longer to get a report on the official site these days.
CropleyWasGod
25-01-2025, 08:42 AM
Radmac on 6 Music have been talking about old-school swimming "baths".
The phrase "shivery-bite" came up.
Not sure if it's still a thing, but it brought up a few waves (see what i did there?) of nostalgia.
HUTCHYHIBBY
25-01-2025, 09:05 AM
Radmac on 6 Music have been talking about old-school swimming "baths".
The phrase "shivery-bite" came up.
Not sure if it's still a thing, but it brought up a few waves (see what i did there?) of nostalgia.
Shivery bite from Quo Vadis chippy was certainly a thing from my childhood after a visit to Dalry Baths.
Wilson
25-01-2025, 09:26 AM
The Pink was really quite an amazing feat when you think about it, particularly as it was the days before widespread email, texting and video calls.
Not only did it have reports from the Hibs and Hearts games but you would have a full page summary of the East of Scotland League and results and reports from local rugby matches as well. You sometimes got the odd L-L on the scores page but for the most part it was comprehensive. Always remember it had the pools table down the side of the results page as well.
Often they were in my local chippy bang on 6pm, we could leave the game and I'd be told to jump out the car, run in and pick up a Pink and get a 10p mixture with the change. You'd have a full report of the game before even getting home. It sometimes takes longer to get a report on the official site these days.
And you get sod all for 10p now either!
I cut my foot on the bottom of the swimming pool of the old High School when I was a bairn. My experience of attending the new school was decent enough, the pitches aren’t up to scratch though (unless they’ve been upgraded since I left). Used to love nipping out the gate on a free period for a walk around Dechmont Law and a “fag” with my pals, definitely made the rest of the day more entertaining. Liked a scotch pie from Morrisons (a mind when I was Safeway as well mate don’t worry[emoji16]) for my lunch and for some reason having to dodge the older boys launching bits of Morrisons saver chocolate at your head.
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Dechmont Law was always popular for somewhere to disappear, have a walk, etc, especially when the weather was nice. So long ago but also so fresh in the mind
lapsedhibee
25-01-2025, 10:43 AM
Radmac on 6 Music have been talking about old-school swimming "baths".
The phrase "shivery-bite" came up.
Not sure if it's still a thing, but it brought up a few waves (see what i did there?) of nostalgia.
Never heard that expression but 6d worth of Gt Junction St chips never tasted better than after a 40 minute session in Viccy/Vickie Baths
CropleyWasGod
25-01-2025, 10:45 AM
Never heard that expression but 6d worth of Gt Junction St chips never tasted better than after a 40 minute session in Viccy/Vickie Baths
Here's me thinking it was a generational thing that all us oldies said.
Maybe you Leithers spoke different, eh no?
Hibspur
25-01-2025, 10:57 AM
The Pink was really quite an amazing feat when you think about it, particularly as it was the days before widespread email, texting and video calls.
Not only did it have reports from the Hibs and Hearts games but you would have a full page summary of the East of Scotland League and results and reports from local rugby matches as well. You sometimes got the odd L-L on the scores page but for the most part it was comprehensive. Always remember it had the pools table down the side of the results page as well.
Often they were in my local chippy bang on 6pm, we could leave the game and I'd be told to jump out the car, run in and pick up a Pink and get a 10p mixture with the change. You'd have a full report of the game before even getting home. It sometimes takes longer to get a report on the official site these days.
My father used to talk about the day when there were two Saturday evening sports papers in Edinburgh, the Green and the Pink. He always favoured the Green because of the colour. They even had half-time editions which were brought into the ground and sold on the terracing.
One of my wife's uncles used to work on the Dundee equivalent, which I think was called the Sporting Post. I remember him telling me that the reporters at the game would phone in their reports in 15-minute run-of-play instalments so that right on full-time they only had one paragraph to add. Presumably it was similar with the Pink.
Apocryphal tale of the days when newspapers used carrier pigeons...one reporter thought he'd get ahead by sending his pigeon just before full-time, only for Hibs to equalise with the last kick of the ball. 'Tell them Hibs equalised in the last minute!' he was alleged to have shouted after the bird.
CropleyWasGod
25-01-2025, 11:00 AM
My father used to talk about the day when there were two Saturday evening sports papers in Edinburgh, the Green and the Pink. He always favoured the Green because of the colour. They even had half-time editions which were brought into the ground and sold on the terracing.
One of my wife's uncles used to work on the Dundee equivalent, which I think was called the Sporting Post. I remember him telling me that the reporters at the game would phone in their reports in 15-minute run-of-play instalments so that right on full-time they only had one paragraph to add. Presumably it was similar with the Pink.
Apocryphal tale of the days when newspapers used carrier pigeons...one reporter thought he'd get ahead by sending his pigeon just before full-time, only for Hibs to equalise with the last kick of the ball. 'Tell them Hibs equalised in the last minute!' he was alleged to have shouted after the bird.
Jeez, I must be old. I can remember the Green.
The Despatch, IIRC. Then it merged with the News, which became the "Evening News and Despatch" for years.
Smartie
25-01-2025, 11:02 AM
The Pink was really quite an amazing feat when you think about it, particularly as it was the days before widespread email, texting and video calls.
Not only did it have reports from the Hibs and Hearts games but you would have a full page summary of the East of Scotland League and results and reports from local rugby matches as well. You sometimes got the odd L-L on the scores page but for the most part it was comprehensive. Always remember it had the pools table down the side of the results page as well.
Often they were in my local chippy bang on 6pm, we could leave the game and I'd be told to jump out the car, run in and pick up a Pink and get a 10p mixture with the change. You'd have a full report of the game before even getting home. It sometimes takes longer to get a report on the official site these days.
My grandad was a newsagent, he had 3 or 4 shops in villages which were slightly closer to Dundee than Edinburgh, so he sold the “Sporting Post”, the Courier’s equivalent to the Pink.
Saturday evenings were incredibly profitable for him. Half of these villages would come in for their copy of the paper and pick up their sweets, cigarettes etc alongside the paper. There’s a comment above about not being able to get anything for 10p these days - but he was able to make money from anything from the penny chews up.
It’s been sad to see the decline of these papers, and in many ways these shops. When I used to get the bus through to Edinburgh to the Hibs games I used to get my copy of the Pink from a newsagent on Broughton Street before getting up to the bus station so I could read it on the bus home.
My current Hibs match day experience consists of me asking my partner if I can go and her telling me “no, we’re busy” more often than not at the moment.
But I get very nostalgic about Hibs days out past. I had a mate who passed away a few years ago who I used to travel the length and breadth of the country watching Hibs with when I lived in Dundee. Sometimes one or the other of us would drive but mostly it was train and heavy drinking. He seemed to know dodgy but wonderful pubs in every outpost in Scotland and introduced me to these delights, with all sorts of incidents and accidents along the way.
Funny how your Hibs supporting experience evolves slowly, then you stop and think about just how much it changes.
silverhibee
25-01-2025, 04:00 PM
Mum and Dad coming back from Spain and bringing back a souvenir donkey :thumbsup:
Itsnoteasy
25-01-2025, 04:12 PM
Shivery bite from Quo Vadis chippy was certainly a thing from my childhood after a visit to Dalry Baths.
Snap. Now that was a chippy,
Keep the bag open please.
Scouse Hibee
25-01-2025, 04:55 PM
My Dad was a butcher and had his own business, as a child I loved the roasted breast of lamb we had for supper every Saturday night without fail about 9 o’clock. The smell of lamb roasting always evokes those happy memories.
ErinGoBraghHFC
25-01-2025, 05:13 PM
Burns Night always brings back happy memories for me, used to have Burns Supper every year at my parents. Nowadays I get a whole haggis to myself as the mrs doesn’t eat it [emoji16] and the accompanying Irn Bru has been upgraded to beer but the simplicity of haggis neeps and tatties being something I always looked forward to as a bairn and still do as an adult is nice. Proper family dinner night.
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Pretty Boy
25-01-2025, 05:26 PM
Burns Night always brings back happy memories for me, used to have Burns Supper every year at my parents. Nowadays I get a whole haggis to myself as the mrs doesn’t eat it [emoji16] and the accompanying Irn Bru has been upgraded to beer but the simplicity of haggis neeps and tatties being something I always looked forward to as a bairn and still do as an adult is nice. Proper family dinner night.
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We are having a Burns supper tonight with a few friends. We usually do a pre Christmas thing at ours but couldn't for it in this year so decided to do tonight instead.
It would be nice to think all the kids involved will be posting as holograms or whatever in 30 years time about how nostalgic they are for these night.
pollution
25-01-2025, 06:16 PM
Shivery bite from Quo Vadis chippy was certainly a thing from my childhood after a visit to Dalry Baths.
Was that in Roseburn ?
BILLYHIBS
25-01-2025, 09:39 PM
Shivery bite from Quo Vadis chippy was certainly a thing from my childhood after a visit to Dalry Baths.
Ach used to go there all the time my gran lived in Orwell Place and as the man said ‘ salt and sauce and leave the bag open mister’
HUTCHYHIBBY
26-01-2025, 10:00 AM
Was that in Roseburn ?
Dalry Road.
AltheHibby
26-01-2025, 11:14 AM
When I was deemed too young to go to games a Saturday afternoon for me was watching the wrestling while eating a mega fry-up to the soundtrack of my granny stamping on the floor when she was angry at the wrestling. We always followed this with watching the results and checking the pools.
And do t get me started on how good Saturday night TV was back then (late 60s and early 70s).
Trinity Hibee
26-01-2025, 02:03 PM
The Pink was really quite an amazing feat when you think about it, particularly as it was the days before widespread email, texting and video calls.
Not only did it have reports from the Hibs and Hearts games but you would have a full page summary of the East of Scotland League and results and reports from local rugby matches as well. You sometimes got the odd L-L on the scores page but for the most part it was comprehensive. Always remember it had the pools table down the side of the results page as well.
Often they were in my local chippy bang on 6pm, we could leave the game and I'd be told to jump out the car, run in and pick up a Pink and get a 10p mixture with the change. You'd have a full report of the game before even getting home. It sometimes takes longer to get a report on the official site these days.
Don’t forget it also had schools football results
Itsnoteasy
26-01-2025, 02:12 PM
In my youth, early 80's when living in Gorgie & Hibs played away I would spend my Saturday afternoon going to watch the Hertz games. Gates were always opened 20 mins from the end. I would be supporting whoever those untsc were playing.
Pretty Boy
26-01-2025, 05:03 PM
Don’t forget it also had schools football results
Ian Mackay who used to do all the school and boys club football wasn't it?
Itsnoteasy
26-01-2025, 05:23 PM
Ian Mackay who used to do all the school and boys club football wasn't it?
He also covered amateur snooker. Ian Mackay was always happy to pop along to local tournaments & get a couple of pictures.
In my youth, early 80's when living in Gorgie & Hibs played away I would spend my Saturday afternoon going to watch the Hertz games. Gates were always opened 20 mins from the end. I would be supporting whoever those untsc were playing.Are you reminded of this when you smell pish?
I lived in Gorgie in the 90s. Great fun.
Itsnoteasy
27-01-2025, 12:56 PM
Are you reminded of this when you smell pish?
I lived in Gorgie in the 90s. Great fun.
Oh those toilets at the top of the Gorgie Road end🤢
overdrive
27-01-2025, 01:13 PM
Similar to a chippy after swimming, I always got a chippy after BBs as a supper.
Another unhealthy supper memory was my mum making homemade crisps in the chip pan. Lightly covered in vinegar and salt. I decided to try make it as an adult and almost set the kitchen on fire. I saw a version using an air fryer recently and we've just got an air fryer so I might give it a go.
Pretty Boy
27-01-2025, 05:50 PM
Similar to a chippy after swimming, I always got a chippy after BBs as a supper.
Another unhealthy supper memory was my mum making homemade crisps in the chip pan. Lightly covered in vinegar and salt. I decided to try make it as an adult and almost set the kitchen on fire. I saw a version using an air fryer recently and we've just got an air fryer so I might give it a go.
BBs. I went to Scouts rather then BBs and it was always seen as a bit nerdy by my fitba mates. I took a bit of a slagging.
What they didn't know was my scout troop had the biggest bam to normal guy ratio I have ever seen. It was full of absolute nutters. One year to the complete horror of the District Commissioner we were leading the District Flag camp going into the final day which would have meant our troops patrol representing the District at the area competition. With but a couple of hours to go we were informed we had been docked 100 points then a few moments later were told that we were in fact disqualified so serious was the offence. Suspecting some Glasgow Rangers refereeing we argued our case only to be told the disqualification was because one of our number had pulled a knife on someone from another troop's patrol for a perceived slight and we should think ourselves lucky there was no police involvement.
We cycled through leaders at some rate. We eventually got a guy who sorted things out. He was a great guy. Ex army but not one those who called the Queen 'the boss' types. He told us he had grown up in a ****hole, had a ***** childhood and the army offered him a job and then a trade he wouldn't otherwise have got. He was no bull**** and most of the bams respected him and behaved around him because he was one of those hard guys who didn't have to act hard. We all sort of drifted apart as we hit 15/16 but a few of us got in touch with each other then in contact with him a couple of years ago and met him for a beer to catch up and say thanks.
Bishop Hibee
27-01-2025, 06:07 PM
I get nostalgic every time I walk along Porty Prom. My Granny and Grampa (mum’s side) lived at the top of Brunstane Road and as a wee boy we were often down on the Prom. There was a kids paddling pool long gone now. My Grampa worked for a company that filled the vending machines round Edinburgh and when he was on call at weekends I used to get to ride with him in the van and fill the milk machine and confectionery at the open air pool.
Fast forward to my teenage years and we’d moved nearer Porty. Learnt to play pool at the arcades at the bottom of Bath Street. 16 and my first local was the Clifton Hotel and when that shut The Proms which was across the road from Porty Baths. Someone’s house now. My first flat, lodged with a mate, was in Pipe Street.
Porty is Morningside-on-Sea now. Great place but I get nostalgic for the rough edges.
HUTCHYHIBBY
27-01-2025, 08:19 PM
Similar to a chippy after swimming, I always got a chippy after BBs as a supper.
Another unhealthy supper memory was my mum making homemade crisps in the chip pan. Lightly covered in vinegar and salt. I decided to try make it as an adult and almost set the kitchen on fire. I saw a version using an air fryer recently and we've just got an air fryer so I might give it a go.
I returned home from Dalry Baths one day to see 3 or 4 fire engines in my street, my granny had had a chip pan fire and put the pan under the cold water tap, kitchen was gutted. 🚒
At least she was fine.
BILLYHIBS
28-01-2025, 08:22 AM
Anyone remember potato fritters from the Chippy ?
Over to you Scouse
Itsnoteasy
28-01-2025, 10:25 AM
BBs. I went to Scouts rather then BBs and it was always seen as a bit nerdy by my fitba mates. I took a bit of a slagging.
What they didn't know was my scout troop had the biggest bam to normal guy ratio I have ever seen. It was full of absolute nutters. One year to the complete horror of the District Commissioner we were leading the District Flag camp going into the final day which would have meant our troops patrol representing the District at the area competition. With but a couple of hours to go we were informed we had been docked 100 points then a few moments later were told that we were in fact disqualified so serious was the offence. Suspecting some Glasgow Rangers refereeing we argued our case only to be told the disqualification was because one of our number had pulled a knife on someone from another troop's patrol for a perceived slight and we should think ourselves lucky there was no police involvement.
We cycled through leaders at some rate. We eventually got a guy who sorted things out. He was a great guy. Ex army but not one those who called the Queen 'the boss' types. He told us he had grown up in a ****hole, had a ***** childhood and the army offered him a job and then a trade he wouldn't otherwise have got. He was no bull**** and most of the bams respected him and behaved around him because he was one of those hard guys who didn't have to act hard. We all sort of drifted apart as we hit 15/16 but a few of us got in touch with each other then in contact with him a couple of years ago and met him for a beer to catch up and say thanks.
Sounds like yer catch up would have been at Saughton Prison.
Itsnoteasy
28-01-2025, 10:25 AM
Anyone remember potato fritters from the Chippy ?
Over to you Scouse
You still get them.
Scouse Hibee
28-01-2025, 12:58 PM
Anyone remember potato fritters from the Chippy ?
Over to you Scouse
We sell them, still pretty popular.
BILLYHIBS
28-01-2025, 01:13 PM
We sell them, still pretty popular.
👍
Just_Jimmy
28-01-2025, 04:22 PM
We sell them, still pretty popular.I love them. Always get them with a chippy.
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DH1875
28-01-2025, 04:39 PM
We sell them, still pretty popular.
Much is a portion of fritters these days?
Smartie
28-01-2025, 04:47 PM
What is a potato fritter?
Just a bit of potato dipped in batter and deep fried?
Are they good?
BILLYHIBS
28-01-2025, 09:15 PM
What is a potato fritter?
Just a bit of potato dipped in batter and deep fried?
Are they good?
Thin slices of potato dipped in batter and deep fat fried
Delicious
Jones28
29-01-2025, 08:06 AM
I don't know if this counts as nostalgia or not but my wife has an app called Timehop which produces "on this day" photos from her library.
10 years ago to the day we were wine tasting at Villa Maria in New Zealand. Since then it feels a bit strange to note all the changes in our lives, from marriage and kids, house moves, job changes.
It seems like we packed so much in to our 20's that the idea of being in the same house/job in 10 years time feels quite alien.
HUTCHYHIBBY
29-01-2025, 08:16 AM
I don't know if this counts as nostalgia or not but my wife has an app called Timehop which produces "on this day" photos from her library.
10 years ago to the day we were wine tasting at Villa Maria in New Zealand. Since then it feels a bit strange to note all the changes in our lives, from marriage and kids, house moves, job changes.
It seems like we packed so much in to our 20's that the idea of being in the same house/job in 10 years time feels quite alien.
Got a similar photo from Amazon Photos yesterday from London Hibs Burns Supper in 2017 with The Scottish Cup, what a night. 🍺🥴🍺
HibbyAndy
05-02-2025, 02:23 PM
Still got a bottle of Fahreneit aftershave in my room that i never use anymore but every now and again i give it a smell and honest to god the first thing that i think of is a girl i dated in Bonnyrigg and i wore it on our first date ! Clear as the nose on my face i can remember it like yesterday the minute i sniff it , Love Nostalgia , Got far far to many memories on here to share but the ones that can take you right back to that present day are very precious
HibbyAndy
05-02-2025, 02:28 PM
I have to watch my relationship with nostalgia as it can lead me to unhappy places. At my worst I have a tendency to wallow.
It’s funny because there are some things that I loved at the time but don’t feel remotely nostalgic about - I’m mainly thinking of stuff like cramming as many bottles of cheap alcopop as possible down my neck at student night. After having eventually been at Uni for 7 years, whilst my boozy, young, free and single days were lots and lots of fun, I wince when I think of them rather than pine for them.
One thing I’d maybe go for… I was going to a family funeral a couple of years ago. For about 10 minutes, before we headed up to the funeral in separate cars, it was just my mum and dad, my brothers and myself in my mum and dad’s house. No partners, no kids, no grandparents, just the five of us as it had been so much growing up. My mum commented on it having not happened for such a long time. I’d probably choose a run of the mill dinner, just the five of us. Piss taking, bullying, correcting grammatical slip ups or destroying anyone if they said anything stupid, stealing chips off each other… it was a great training ground for all sorts environments we’ve found ourselves in since. Obviously we still see each other but the dynamic is very different with my parents being older, the 3 of us having wives / partners and there being 6 kids between the 3 of us.
The problem with nostalgia imo is that it can stop you appreciating the stuff under your nose that you’ll be nostalgic about later. I find that the more I make an effort to appreciate something at the time then the less I feel the need to pine for it later. Kids growing up, growing out of outfits and stopping doing things is an emotional rollercoaster though.
:top marks Smartie , Nailed it mate , It's why i always try my hardest to enjoy a special occasion you are going to , No even that to be fair , Just Taking my kids to somewhere like Pizza hut or Cosmos for a scran and finding something funny , It's that 'finding something funny ' You will remember for years and years and will talk about at xmas dinners , Just enjoy life guys , Make memories now to cherish forever
overdrive
05-02-2025, 03:16 PM
Still got a bottle of Fahreneit aftershave in my room that i never use anymore but every now and again i give it a smell and honest to god the first thing that i think of is a girl i dated in Bonnyrigg and i wore it on our first date ! Clear as the nose on my face i can remember it like yesterday the minute i sniff it , Love Nostalgia , Got far far to many memories on here to share but the ones that can take you right back to that present day are very precious
Similar to that with me in terms of two trips I've been on. I used the Lynx Dark Temptation shower gel on a trip to Turkey in 2008 and it always reminds me of that holiday.
Likewise, I think Dove for Men had just been released when I went to New Zealand in 2010 to visit my ex's sister who lived there and had the shower gel and deodorant with me on that trip. When I smell it now I can still remember the shower in my ex-sister-in-law's flat and doing specific things in NZ that I just associate the smell with.
He's here!
12-02-2025, 03:36 PM
Not so much nostalgia, but I'll quite frequently be doing something unremarkable like, say, chopping onions or just walking up the stairs and a powerful memory will suddenly enter my head. It's not as though I've got some music playing that will jog that memory or that I'd been thinking about that era in my life. I sometimes to try to analyse what prompted that particular recall but there's no obvious trigger. I guess it's just the way the mind works.
Scouse Hibee
12-02-2025, 11:35 PM
Making memories now is my nostalgic mission. I have so many happy memories of my own that I try to make as many now as I can with my family for them to remember. I just love to give and help others have great times.
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