Dot Hatfield
Menu
  • Home Page / Blog
  • About Dot Hatfield
  • Dot’s Books
  • Contact Dot
Menu

Growing Up In “Hard Times”

Posted on May 31, 2023 by Dot

I’m a child of the depression, born the year FDR became President and things began to ease up a bit, but still influenced by “hard times.” A stay-at-home mom with a houseful of kids, my mother learned well how to manage and make do.

My parents owned only two refrigerators during their 57 years of marriage. “If it ain’t broke, no need to replace it” seemed to be their motto. Other appliances, pots and pans, and household utensils stayed around forever.

Mother had a pair of silver-looking scissors. These were to be used for sewing — cutting cloth — exclusively. Thou shalt not cut paper dolls with Mother’s good scissors. As a child, I remember a man coming around to the house offering to sharpen scissors and knives. A very useful service. Nowadays, I doubt the scissors we buy can be sharpened when they become dull. We either throw them away or put them in the kitchen junk drawer, never to be used again.

Appliances today are made with “planned obsolescence.” They are meant to last for a certain number of hours, then they stop working. It’s less expensive to replace than to repair them. Our landfills are full of toasters, microwaves, blenders, and computers.

My mother would have loved to recycle, had she lived to see that effort come about. During World War II she saved newspapers for the Scouts, and cans and tin foil for the war effort.

Once a woman came by our house and asked Mother to save scraps for her pigs. If Mother would put garbage in a can by the back fence, the woman would come around with her cart and collect it for her pigs.

Mother was happy to do it. She would not waste a morsel of food as long as there was a hungry hog in the county.

Category: Living my Life

Post navigation

← I’m Back
Heroes are Called … →

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dot Hatfield

Dot Hatfield

Dot Hatfield is a member of the Arkansas Writers Hall of Fame and a Certified Lay Speaker in the United Methodist Church. She is the author of 7 books.

Dot’s Books

  • Worth the Candle
  • Did Anyone Read My Story?
  • An Ordinary Day
  • R.I.P. Emma Lou Briggs
  • To Find a Home
  • The Last To Know
  • Every Day a New Day

RECENT POSTS

  • Dot Hatfield 90th birthday celebrationWonderful October
    November 11, 2023
  • Something I Did Once Upon a Time
    October 5, 2023
  • Heroes are Called …
    July 3, 2023
  • Time for ChangeI’m Back
    April 7, 2023
  • Between All Hallows Eve and Christmas
    November 14, 2020

POST Topics

  • Living my Life
  • Movies
  • Reading List
  • Somewhat Current Events
  • Television
  • Too General to Define
  • Writing

Recent Comments

  • Regina McLemore on Wonderful October
  • Peg Herriage on Wonderful October
  • Anthony on Something I Did Once Upon a Time
  • Linda on Between All Hallows Eve and Christmas
© 2025 Dot Hatfield | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme