Life started for me on July 19, 1964. Heyday of the Beatles while I'm still lying on my crib cryin' for milk. I remember and still feel it to this day the warm bath and shampoo my mother gave me in my small baby tub. Oh, how refreshing! Dad said, I always smelled fresh as he carried me in his arms. Then I remembered being in this play bed with net around it so I can see what's going on on the outside world of the living room. Life was sweet as a baby. I grew up in the farm where the air was fresh and trees surrounded the house. We had an electric generator we depended on for electricity (where it was a luxury). We had running water and indoor plumbing, so it was okay in that area although we depended on our windmill at first to fill up our main water tank before we upgraded to a generator water pump. There was also a manual pump option where you manually have to pump it if the water generator wouldn't start. It was a good upper body work out. We had the old vintage (non rotary dial) phone with lever you had to "stir" to get in touch with the operator to connect you to the city. Our refrigerator wasn't powered by electricity but by gas (for some reason, it worked!) I remember the big old black and white console TV with vacuum tubes that we had to wait till it heated up to show its picture. No satellite, cable, VCRs, DVDs, or computers but I got along well without them. Boy, have we gone a long way. My kids just don't know what they have now! Dad would play his records loudly as I danced to the beat of Herb Alpert's Tijuana Brass. Sunday's would always be spent in my grandparents' house and lunch would always be a plethora of home cooked meals only from grandma's recipes. I'm really missing that now. When we spent the night there, during breakfast time, grandpa would always ask us (me and my sister), Have you drank your Ovaltine yet? It's as if breakfast wasn't completed for him till you drank that Ovaltine. Now I always make that Nesquick chocolate milk for my kids. Life was sweet for me some 40 yrs. ago. How about you, have things changed much then for you?