Let’s face it, growing up in the ’70s built character. Back then, life wasn’t about convenience, it was about figuring things out the hard way. There were no smartphones, no streaming services, and no GPS to rescue you when you were lost (which, by the way, was often). It was a time when kids drank from garden hoses, rode bikes without helmets, and had to survive entire family road trips with nothing but the AM radio and a crumpled map.
While today’s kids have the world at their fingertips, those of us who grew up in the seventies had to earn our stripes. We learned independence, patience, and how to survive boredom without a screen. Here are 20 reasons why kids who grew up in the 1970s had it tougher than kids today.
1. No internet

If you were a kid in the ’70s, you understand the struggle of needing to learn things for yourself. There was no Siri to ask your questions, if you needed to know something, you were heading to the library.
2. No privacy on the phone

When your friends called your house, the phone cord made it so mom was listening only five feet away. So naturally, she knew all of your business.
3. Kids were the remote

Kids today don’t understand the luxury of being able to change the channel while seated. In the ’70s, if your dad wanted the channel changed, he’d call you in from the other room to help him do it.
4. Saturday morning cartoons only

In the ’70s you had one shot a week to get your fill of cartoons. If you missed it, unfortunately, there was nothing you could do, and you’d have to wait another 7 days.
5. Four TV channels

In the ’70s, most homes had access to just 4 major networks. They were ABC, CBS, NBC, and PBS. The worst part was, that one of them was always fuzzy.
6. Playdates didn’t exist

Mom wasn’t making plans for you to hang out with friends in the ’70s. You just knocked on your friend’s door and hoped they were home. The skills and life lessons this simple act taught were more than we know.
7. No GPS

On long car rides with the family, you were the GPS. And for some reason, that map was impossible to read and impossible to fold back into its original shape. The GPS has saved countless fights, and we shouldn’t take it for granted.
8. Corporal punishment was normal

Parents, and even teachers, didn’t mess around in the ’70s. If you acted up in school, there was a good chance you’d be getting a yardstick to the back of the hand.
9. You had to use film cameras

There wasn’t instant gratification like there is today in the ’70s. Unless you used a Polaroid camera, you had to wait to get your photos developed to be able to see what you looked like.
10. People smoked everywhere in the ’70s

Planes, hotel rooms, restaurants, you name it. As a kid in the ’70s, you couldn’t escape the smoke. With a greater focus on safety today, we’re helping keep kids safe.
11. Playgrounds weren’t safe

There weren’t woodchips like there are today. In most cases, slides and jungle jims were placed right on top of concrete. Burned legs and broken bones were just a part of the fun.
12. You recorded music onto cassette tapes

In the ’70s, you couldn’t just add music to your library and listen at your own convenience, you had to wait for your favorite tune to come on the radio, pull out your tapes, and record your favorite songs.
13. You had to memorize phone numbers

There were no contact lists programmed into the phone, if you wanted to call your friend, you had to remember their number. The worst was when it was your turn to use the phone and you couldn’t remember the number you had to call.
14. Gym class was brutal

Not only was gym class much more physically taxing, but dodgeball was a day from your nightmares. There weren’t any foam balls, just big red rubber ones.
15. Long-distance calls cost money

Since long-distance calls cost money, conversations were fast and serious. There were no hour-long phone conversations with family members who lived across the country.
16. You were no “participation trophies”

In the ’70s, you didn’t get a trophy unless you won. Second place got a handshake, and third, got a lesson in humility.
17. Riding in the back of the station wagon

Before car laws got serious, the back of the station wagon was basically a playground. No seatbelts and kids wrestling on the floor were a common daily occurrence.
18. You had one pair of good shoes

Your sneakers were for school, gym, church, and chores around the house. If your one pair got ruined, you’d get a self-taught lesson on how to fix shoes.
19. Losing something meant really losing it

There was no “find my” or “air tags” in the ’70s. So if you lost your bike, your wallet, or your favorite toy, it was gone forever.
20. No online shopping

You couldn’t have something shipped to you in the comfort of your own home. If you needed a new shirt or food, you were heading into town to pick it up yourself.