• uuldika@lemmy.ml
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    11 days ago

    ran a Tor exit node. chatted on Bluelight. took over a (small) botnet. tripped on research chemicals.

  • BlueSquid0741@lemmy.sdf.org
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    11 days ago

    We’d grab our bikes and ride across town. If they saw our bikes were gone they knew we’d be back later.

    After the abduction and murder of two local girls, this wasn’t so accepted anymore. Kids were still out and about, but you’d get grilled about where you go, who you’re with, where are you coming home. You were supposed to be at someone’s house, mum would call and make sure that’s where you were. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bega_schoolgirl_murders

    I don’t see any kids out around town anymore now though. Just the ones that walk from the bus stop to their house after school. That might just say more about todays youth culture though.

    • TTH4P@lemm.ee
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      11 days ago

      Holy shit that is heartbreaking. Thanks for responding to the topic but it’s a rough article.

      • BlueSquid0741@lemmy.sdf.org
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        11 days ago

        I didn’t know these two girls because they were a few years older, but I knew other kids who did know them. Wasn’t good.

    • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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      11 days ago

      This is one of the reasons cars have such a chokehold, kids don’t bike places as often because of safety concerns.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      One time as a kid, a friend lent me her glasses (I never needed glasses, but I always liked them) and I went to climb a tree. In the tree, looking down, the glasses made it seem like I was much closer to the ground than I was.

      So I jumped.

      It was extremely stupid. There was a point during the fall when I felt like I should’ve reached the ground already, but I hadn’t. In the end I was fine, the glasses were fine, and my friend thought it was funny. But wow, that could’ve gone disasterously wrong.

  • wuphysics87@lemmy.ml
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    11 days ago

    Our school playground didn’t have a rubber ground. Or mulch. Or wood chips. No. We had gravel. Like little rocks gravel. And a swing set. A big one. Recess for us was jumping as far as we could into gravel.

    We also had wooden monkey bars that gave you splinters. We tried to skip bars, and if we were lucky, land on the gravel. If we weren’t lucky, we would fall into a hornet’s nest. Hornets loved those old wooden playgrounds.

    But perhaps the greatest piece of school yard entertainment was the steel merry go round. We’d have one of us try to hang off of it horizontally with 3 or 4 of us sping it. Lose your grip and fall off? Where would you land? You guessed it. Face first into the gravel.

    That thing would get hot enough in the summer to fry an egg, but as much as we enjoyed eating our breakfast that way, we lost it before the end of 8th grade. A kid from a neighboring school crawled under theirs and tried to grab the axel while it was turning. It ripped his hand clean off. But still, those were the days.

    • beastlykings@sh.itjust.works
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      11 days ago

      Didn’t rip my hand off, but I definitely fell off one of those things, busted the back of my head open. I kind of… Fell backwards with my legs wrapped around the saddle, and hit the bottom edge with my head.

      Split open like a mouth.

      Rushed to the hospital. 23 stitches and 13 staples to close it up again. I have to have my hair cut a special way to hide the scar. People are always surprised when I show them.

      I still rode those things afterwards. Kids were tougher back then lol, had to be 🤷‍♂️

      • r0ertel@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Similar story. I was in elementary school and fell off the monkeybars and landed flat on my back and knocked myself out, surrounded by kids. I woke up later and everyone was gone, so I got up and went back to class. I got detention for being late. When my parents asked why I “skipped class” I said that I didn’t know and was grounded for not telling the truth.

        I did other dumb things, mostly around bodies of water (cliff diving, rip currents). I’m surprised that I’m not dead. As an adult, I’m afraid of everything.

        • beastlykings@sh.itjust.works
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          10 days ago

          Yikes, kids are dumb lol.

          I never grew up around waves, so when my brother and I visited family on the coast and we were playing in the waves, other people wouldn’t join us. We were going further and further out. Finally we convinced the guy to join us, and no lie, he said he jokingly said “ok I guess I’ll die too”. We didn’t know what he meant. All three of us got stuck in a mild rip current. I almost drowned trying to swim directly into it. Nobody told me any different. My brother and the other guy were stronger swimmers, they were ok. It all happened very fast. We gave that guy an earful afterwards, he was like “I thought you knew” 🤦‍♂️

    • Retro_unlimited@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      One time in the mid 2000s my friend and I were on a hike in the mountains and we found a tree that was like a cave, all branches everywhere except a little entrance. Inside we found porn magazines with the pictures ripped out and placed on branches all over the inside of the “cave”. After that we always joked about the porn cave we found.

  • barneypiccolo@lemm.ee
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    10 days ago

    Back in the 60s, i was a Free-Range kid. On on a nice non-school day, I would go out after breakfast on my bike, and be gone all day, without any money, a watch, ID, cell phone (didn’t exist back then), anything, and I’d be gone all day. The only rule was to be home by 5 pm.

    Nobody knew where I was, who I was speaking to, or anything. If i bumped into friends, I’d hang out for a while, but if I needed to know the time, I’d ask some stranger. If I was thirsty, I’d knock on a random door and ask for a glass of water. Once, I stopped at the end of a driveway to watch some guy doing woodworking in his open garage. He saw me watching and this stranger invited me into garage, and showed me his tools, and what he was building. Turned out he was a decent guy, and I probably reminded him of his grandson, but what if he wasn’t? My primary fear was running into the Robolotto boys, but as long as I didn’t see one of them, I was happy.

    This was routine for years, and it was the same for my friends. I started doing this when I was about 7 years old.

      • barneypiccolo@lemm.ee
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        9 days ago

        I think it helped shape me into a an adventurous, curious person, because that was what motivated me as a kid. Other Free Range kids might have gone out to play sports, or to look for trouble, etc., but i was just exploring.

        There was another direct influence on my life: Once, i headed to a nearby “woods,” to watch animals, and bumped into some friends. One jumped over a small creek to greet me, and stepped right onto an underground bee hive. They all poured out of that hive like water, and came directly for me. The first stung my lip, then neary eye. They got in my hair, up my t-shirt, stuck in my socks etc.

        I jumped on my bike and started racing toward home, hoping to outrun them, but they were the kind of bees that don’t lose their stingers, so the ones stuck in my clothes kept stinging me. By the time i got home i had at least 30 stings.

        I’m okay now, but i was really afraid of bees for many years. Gardening helped me learn to lose my fear.

        Overall, i think it made me a person who isn’t afraid of the world, and i know i can navigate any situation that comes up.

  • BCsven@lemmy.ca
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    10 days ago
    • Walk around town with a pellet gun
    • walk home from school alone
    • catch fish from the creek and eat them, after cooking on a fire in the field-- started with a magnifying glass.
    • build a tree fort in the forest 20-30 feet up
    • walk on the barely frozen creek
    • read books
  • yngmnwntr@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    I see a lot of similar stories here about wandering free and living like feral kids but I want to second making homemade Explosives from hobby shop Rocket engines.

  • ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    Got vaccinated.

    That’s a joke. The real answer is almost everything. I was practically feral and lived next to a swamp in Louisiana. RFK Jr. is 100% wrong about disease prevention but there’s no vaccine for snapping turtles.

  • Canopyflyer@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    I’m a Gen X’er… Not sure if the Lemmy’s word limit on posts would allow me to list it all.

    So here are a few:

    Drank from the garden hose? Check

    Rode in a car without seat belts? As a toddler? As a baby? Check

    Rode my bike all over town with no helmet? Had an accident that put me in a coma for 48hrs because of not wearing a helmet? Check

    Harvested tobacco on my grandparents farm? Check (Anyone who has done this by hand, working with those stakes knows the risks.)

    I started skydiving in the early 90’s. My mother was absolutely appalled and constantly berated me about how “dangerous” it is to jump out of an airplane.

    The truth of the matter was I was far safer in free fall than I was during most of my adolescence.

    • Raiderkev@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      LMAO this just reminded me of the time my buddy’s car was overloaded and I still didn’t want to walk home so I asked him if I could ride on the roof of his sedan with my arms holding on through the window holes. It worked, and I didn’t die, so I got that going for me. Glad people didn’t have smartphones then like they do today. A vid would have 100% made it’s way to my parents somehow.