i couldn't find anything and turned on a catholic station on the satellite.anyway it was about this polish priest ministering to catholics in albania and trying to teach them some basics because of the effects of communism and supression of liberties.well,as i watched the priest drove a landrover because he had to cross a river that flowed at different levels depending on rain or snow melt so sometimes the church would be isolated.
i noticed that the people lived simply,raising chickens and goats and some cooked on woodstoves and lived in masonary homes that were probably several generations old.the outside of the church seemed to be a social gathering spot for kids and teenagers,and i noticed there weren't any fat kids,the area was mountainous.i never saw a television or satellite dish and i'd bet most didn't have a car.i remembered how it was a my grandparents on my mothers side in nebraska.
no running water,just a sistern outside,they would get water from a neighbors well to drink,usually in milk cans.they did wash by hand,i think they had a wringer setup with a tub underneath.the women didn't have sanitary napkins back then hence the slang term for when they experienced their monthly aggravation.
i'm sure many of your parents lived a similiar lifestyle when they were growing up so i'm not telling you anything new.so this show made me think that they were living like my mom and her folks.my granddad would raise rabbits to eat,he grew up hunting them and just liked rabbit.
my mother said if he bought some fish in town he would say he had caught it with his silver hook
.it made me think maybe they are better not worse off,not hammered with news and images that are negative,no outside influences for their parents to deal with,maybe a little bored
.but i had all kinds of stuff to choose from as a kid and i still got bored.heck,some of the most fun i had was playing imaginary baseball games hitting rocks with a splintered board where i was always the star
i guess i'm saying i think simplier is better sometimes though i appreciate alot of the advantages that the modern world brings.
i noticed that the people lived simply,raising chickens and goats and some cooked on woodstoves and lived in masonary homes that were probably several generations old.the outside of the church seemed to be a social gathering spot for kids and teenagers,and i noticed there weren't any fat kids,the area was mountainous.i never saw a television or satellite dish and i'd bet most didn't have a car.i remembered how it was a my grandparents on my mothers side in nebraska.
no running water,just a sistern outside,they would get water from a neighbors well to drink,usually in milk cans.they did wash by hand,i think they had a wringer setup with a tub underneath.the women didn't have sanitary napkins back then hence the slang term for when they experienced their monthly aggravation.
i'm sure many of your parents lived a similiar lifestyle when they were growing up so i'm not telling you anything new.so this show made me think that they were living like my mom and her folks.my granddad would raise rabbits to eat,he grew up hunting them and just liked rabbit.
my mother said if he bought some fish in town he would say he had caught it with his silver hook

i guess i'm saying i think simplier is better sometimes though i appreciate alot of the advantages that the modern world brings.