Welcome to the Melbourne Community Daily Discussion Thread.

  • Thornburywitch
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    1 year ago

    Can confirm this. During primary school we walked or rode our bikes (4 sibs). Getting dropped off in a car meant you had a broken leg/foot. Secondary school I was at a boarding school. On weekends we’d pick up a sandwich lunch from the school kitchen and get on our bikes and go for a long ride. Had to be back by sunset for rollcall. No supervision. The miracle was that we didn’t get in trouble - not even close. Couldn’t do that nowadays - the school authorities would be screaming and so would the parents. We’d also take one of the school dinghies and go fishing all day - the kitchen took the loot and served it up for breakfast the next day.

    • Rusty Raven M
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      1 year ago

      The need to supervise children every waking minute of their lives has reached fairly absurd proportions. I while ago I was reading about a “walking school bus” program designed to get kids walking to school instead of being driven. It was facing closure because of lack of funding. The idea that walking to school is something that needs both a special program and funding is just wrong in so many ways.

      I don’t know how we managed to get from children being able to run around mostly unsupervised to a society in which people will call 000 because they see a teenager sitting in a car without an adult, but we have.

      • Catfish
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        1 year ago

        It boggles the mind. My parents were pretty tight, and I still walked multi km to the trainstation. What they would’ve been like with the tracking and helicopter options available now is terrifying.