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I remember my toddler stage asking "Tops?" as in a store that we used to go to when my "mommy" said we were going to the store...  It was a small store that sold just about everything and I remember it being real dark inside it...

 

Then I remember some big K Mart type place where I got my toy blender at--and wonder how when one broke I got another one--but broke/lost 'em both... (My mom said when we were getting the 1st one--the blade inside it twirled w/ the push of a button; it abpoviously ran on a couple batteries--"Oh, you're excited about the blender!"--and I was...)

 

 

-- Dave
 
Dave,

Topp's was a discount store similar to Ames, or Zayer for those not in the mitten area.
Do you remember also Shoppers Fair, Arlans, W.T Grant, or Yankee?
There were one or two Spartan Atlantic's as well, and E.J Korvette.
I was driving already (at least) when Break My Stride came out.
 
The Ones I have & had such a Mad Crush On:

& The Cartoon Girl who's Introductory Theme still brings a tear to my eye:

 

Dorothy Hammill, Debbie Harry, Juliet Mills, Madonna--now it's Sofia The First:

 

Oh, the store I got my toy blender at probably had to have been WT Grant's--and when it folded it was Spartan Atlantic, until it left of the retailing map...

 

 

-- Dave

 
. . . over the cacophony of the TV, someone talking on the phone and someone else playing games on their smartphone or tablet, you can hear the subtle "ping" of your pressure cooker's safety valve opening after a natural pressure drop from two rooms away.
 
GRWasher_expert

hahahaha LOL you said it right ! It is all true, everything you've said applies also to me :-)
 
Own two Laserdisc players-one has a DVD player in it-Pioneer-first machine of its kind-still works.The Sony Laserdisc machine is still packed from a move.Never heard of a Heathkit Microwave-sounds like more trouble than its worth.Remember other Heathkits,though-mainly weather stations built for radio stations.And a Heathkit DVM-never really worked right,though.Oh yes-still have a Sony VCR-never used thought-lately-did still work.
 
You put your mom on Hold when she calls you from the neighbor's house across the street, while she's helping you type your book report for school (I don't know what was wrong w/ our typewriter! Did it need a new RIBBON?!) and in that book, there was a gal that drove an MG over a tarred road, but she'd misinterpreted the make of the car as a Mr. G. (what my girl I had the mad crush on's dad's personalized license plate on his car had) as opposed to MmmmmgGeeeee...

 

That is, the phone at our house lay on the kitchen counter while I was waiting for my Crosby, Stills & Nash '45' of "Sweet Judy Blue Eyes" (b/w "Marrakesh (not AMERICAN) Express, as my dad pointed out!) to finish... (And the teacher whose class I was in doing the book report for was a big fan of the group--there was a book w/ a photo of these guys, plus Neil Young in it (And somehow it reminded me of Buffalo Springfield's "For What It Was Worth"--but no way could that be what they were playing; they were in a studio around a keyboard (I think Graham Nash was playing) while the rest of the three principals had their guitars) and boasted of having all their albums, and not just seeing them in concert at Medowbrook (which is where they'd notably played circa. that 30-+-years-ago, but all around the Country...)

 

Mom gave me the "I'm doing this for you!", as I'd finally got to the phone--and I don't think it occurred to me until after a long pause what her questions before I could clear up the confusion she'd been stumbling over, meant!!!!

 

 

-- Dave

 

 

 
 
. . . you're the oldest person in the self-service checkout line at the Walmart Neighborhood Market (and therefore, a member of the generation that trashed the planet and left it for the Millennials to fix) and you're also the only one who brought reusable shopping bags.
 
Years ago Mom burned the cauliflower--and pulled the chain that started the wall-mounted exhaust fan (nearing the last times anything like that ever got used--or even WORKED!--hence I would ride my bike past the four houses on our block (including ours), and the seven across the street from us & the seven around the block behind those, saying "Closed", "Open", "Open", "Closed", in viewing how many doors on those sides of the houses showed those fans (which by now all of probably fell into total dis-use) were on--even slowly peering up a driveway, with a little suspense in my voice saying: "OPEN!" (--maybe even Shouting)... Can't help but wonder if some grown person on a 10-speed riding in the street, that I saw, was mimicking me--he seemed to be saying that to himself, riding past the houses like I did... (Maybe not...)

 

Anyway, at my grandma's sister's house, my great-aunt Ruth, I noticed no exhaust fan in her kitchen--wall or ceiling, so asked what does she do when she burns the cauliflower (I asked my grandma that, after the incident--she said that she just juts opened a window) and she turned on this exhaust fan that was over her oven (I think she had a Fabulous 400 or Flair-type of stove, that years later I completely forgot what it got replaced with, or just never acknowledged a plain, ordinary cooking appliance taking its place, as much everything else--including a stacked washer & dryer, that I think replaced a stacked W&D) and gave a bashful "Wow!" when she turned it on...

 

 

-- Dave
 
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