
Most adults were less blasé about alcohol, but even so by high school there was a small but significant percentage of parents who didn’t give a shit if their kids got drunk. My cousin and I routinely, as pre-teens, sneaked off to buy snuff at the local convenience store, where no questions were asked – then we put a bit inside our lip, got lightheaded and nauseous, then stashed the remainder in a stone wall near our grandma’s house and fell asleep at her house watching horror movies on Dr.

My high school had a “smoking lav,” where students could – with parental consent – puff away to their lungs’ content. People just didn’t worry much about tobacco use. For example, seeing kids 10 or younger walking down the street smoking cigarettes would elicit a “tsk, tsk” sort of reaction from most grownups, equivalent to the reaction you’d get if a kid drank coffee. The attitudes were, by today’s standards, a little crazy. Teens around Pennsyltucky ( where I grew up) in the mid-80s, having grown up in the 1970s, had a unique perspective on cigarettes, drugs, alcohol and all things mind-altering. Step 1: Make The Decision To Go Get Drunk
#All pink floyd albums from oldest to newest how to
How To Get Drunk Like A Rural Pennsylvania Teenager In The Mid-1980s NOTE: The setup – below the line ↓ – might be the best part … Or skip right to the album discussion.

The themes of being human in a modern world still resonate today, nearly 50 years after its release.

It’s a timeless record deserving of its many accolades and commercial success. Roger Waters may have written most of the songs, but this is a David Gilmour tour de force, both for guitar and vocals. IN A NUTSHELL: The Dark Side of the Moon, Pink Floyd’s wildly successful album, is another record from Floyd that demands to be heard in its entirety, first song to last.
