For Better or For Worse by Lynn Johnston for July 30, 2021

  1. B986e866 14d0 4607 bdb4 5d76d7b56ddb
    Templo S.U.D.  over 2 years ago

    no easy revisiting your hometown to see so many changes

     •  Reply
  2. Baby
    wjones  over 2 years ago

    My home town is totally different. Everything been replaced, enclouding the house I grew up in.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    Prescott_Philosopher   over 2 years ago

    The house where used to live as a child in Los Vegas is now gone and there’s a mega hotel there. It would have been fun to have seen if I remembered anything in it after 73 years. Ah well, life moves on.

     •  Reply
  4. Gocomicsluna2
    Leojim  over 2 years ago

    I’m lucky, the town that I grew up in has changed very very little. About all that has changed is the central swamp of town turned into a nice little lake. And then there is a few extra houses on their Fringe, but other than that very little has changed. North Central Pennsylvania.

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    BlitzMcD  over 2 years ago

    Someone I know moved out of a particular area in 1976. I was there recently and took a picture of his old house and showed it to him. And he got upset because the current owners remodeled it and kept it up. “That’s not how I remember it!!”, he complained. Well, he hasn’t been there in 45 years!!! What’s it supposed to be, a shrine to him?? The old drive-in and grade school in my old neighborhood were demolished years ago and it’s a strip mall now. And so what Good for them! I’m sure that suits their purposes better than some old building I haven’t been in for decades just because I had memories there. “Take paradise and put up a parking lot?” Meh. Joni Mitchell was wrong. Catchy tune, unrealistic lyrics.

     •  Reply
  6. Pictures 087
    Baarorso  over 2 years ago

    I know how they feel. I’ve gone places where old landmarks (such as a mall I used to hang out at as a teen) were but aren’t there anymore but was half expecting them to still be there. sigh

     •  Reply
  7. Americauna chicks 1 week 003
    howtheduck  over 2 years ago

    Lynn Johnston is probably making reference to the Cedar Theatre in North Vancouver which opened in 1956 and closed in 1971 and was then demolished a few years after Lynn moved to Ontario from North Vancouver.

    As for the school, she is talking about North Vancouver Senior Secondary School, that she and her brother attended. The school was closed June of 1979 and the school building was demolished in 1980, and a provincial court house was built on the site.

    As for Elly Patterson, to be making these kinds of statements as if they were new to her would imply that she has not been to visit her mother or father at their home in North Vancouver in a long time. With Lynn Johnston, it makes more sense because her parents moved to Hope, BC, a few years after Lynn Johnston left North Vancouver, so when she visited her parents, she would not see changes to North Vancouver.

     •  Reply
  8. Fb img 1575732366064
    Macushlalondra  over 2 years ago

    My childhood home is still there and the block looks pretty much the same but the house was sold after my mother’s death in 2015. I wonder if the lady who bought it has changed it at all. My mother lived there from 1956 when she and my dad bought the house until her death. The only other change I know of is my former elementary school was torn down at some point and the land lies vacant. Just grass. I wonder if anything will ever be built there again.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    William J. Mackey  over 2 years ago

    Couple of years ago I made a sentimental journey to towns I once lived in. A lot of changes in 40+ years. And I’m at the age (for several years) when someone mentions a new place its followed by “where such-and-such was” and then I know where they are talking about. :)

     •  Reply
  10. Tommy lee jones look
    Johnnyrico  over 2 years ago

    It is a bit disheartening. There are a lot of places in my old hometown that I don’t recognize anymore…I moved away 35 years ago, I get back there occasionally, and every time I go there’s always some different stuff.

     •  Reply
  11. Desron14 blue
    amanbe3  over 2 years ago

    I lived in Orlando, Florida, pre-Disney (1955-1970). Talk about changes! I avoid that town at all costs now.

     •  Reply
  12. 6365f3b8 1150 4fe3 b2ca 7ee9aea79d84
    ATGMer  over 2 years ago

    Every house I lived in as a kid no longer exists. That’s progress?

     •  Reply
  13. 12096163 10208146144835435 1521103477773626516 n
    dwdl21  over 2 years ago

    Thankfully my neighbourhood is still very close to what it was, they expanded the mall I used to hang out in but that’s it.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    preacherman  over 2 years ago

    I often drive by my first house I lived in when I was 6. It’s still there, though the garage is a room, now. And the house has more apartments where a vacant lot once was. I imagine the interior is much the same. I went into it several decades ago, when it was empty, and it seemed so small. The difference wasn’t the house as much as it was my height.

     •  Reply
  15. 20210517 082929
    flagmichael  over 2 years ago

    I think most of us see our schools torn down – our life expectancy is more than that of a school building – although I went to a high school in 1966 that was 50 years old. However, the best school I went to was Richmond High School in Richmond, California, in 1967/8. The principal had a great understanding of teen nature and made the school a wonderful place for students who made any effort at all. However, the buildings were built with a faux brick facade that was known to shuck off and become a serious hazard. Remediation was too expensive for the aging school and the year I was there was to be its last. I didn’t even know – one of the kindnesses of fate – that I would finish high school in the worst school I could have imagined. Knowing the best made it easier to survive the worst; the future was dark but I knew there was light out there somewhere. That was by far the most important thing I learned at any school.

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    this is summerdog  over 2 years ago

    When you go home everything looks so much smaller!

     •  Reply
  17. Profile msn
    vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Yup. It’s mentally painful to go home now. Even the changes I got used to have changed again.

     •  Reply
  18. Dr coathanger abortions 150
    Teto85 Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Imagine how beautiful it must have been before the colonizers invaded.

     •  Reply
  19. Myfreckledface
    VegaAlopex  over 2 years ago

    My hometown has been steadily dying, and I have no desire to go back and visit graves after a quarter century.

     •  Reply
  20. Tippy2
    sbwertz  over 2 years ago

    The small farming town I grew up in hasn’t really changed that much. It’s been 60 years and some of the stores on Main Street are the same ones that were there when I was a teen. My old house is still there (they put siding over the stucco, though, and it seems to have SHRUNK!) The road in front is paved now…it was gravel then. My old high school is still standing, but is the middle school now and there’s a new high school. But all and all, it is still my old home town.

     •  Reply
  21. Cowboy
    Robert4170  over 2 years ago

    Me and a friend of mine visited our old summer camp when we were adults. We were shocked to see how small everything looked.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    christelisbetty  over 2 years ago

    A couple of days ago, I heard on the news, there had been a shoot out, leaving one dead, at the city park I played in as a kid.

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    1JennyJenkins  over 2 years ago

    A dead person was found in a car in a parking lot at the toboggan hill walking distance from our home… There was a shoot out last summer two streets over. Just in the spring, a baby was run over on a street behind us,…. etc…

    We had neighbors who were renting next door, where the police made regular calls at least twice a week because of them arguing… there is police across the street practically once a week or two, in the house across the street… When two police cars show up, you know it’s “domestic”…. That’s just recent…

    In the time we’ve been here: forty years plus, a lot has changed, and we still live a “desirable” neighborhood. We moved to this town when it had a population of about 70,000. Today it is over 700,000…and we’re not moving, no way, no how…

    We have great neighbors otherwise, since the renters moved on and the house was sold to a nice family, and great public transit to do our shopping and visit our doctors for the future when we won’t be able to drive, but one never knows what future has in store for us….

     •  Reply
  24. Picture
    CoreyTaylor1  over 2 years ago

    I’m surprised John and the kids haven’t changed the locks on Helly!

     •  Reply
  25. 20211115 131849
    samfran6-0  over 2 years ago

    I had mentioned before that my MiL sold her house and came to live with us. We went back to Ohio for a visit and rode by her old house two or three times. The new owners had remodeled the house so beautifully, we didn’t recognize it at first. Also, my hometown is like that Lou Rawls’ song, “Tobacco Road”. Where they torn it down and built it up all over again. But, kept the name………

     •  Reply
  26. Img 0448
    queenoftut  over 2 years ago

    My brother still lives in the house in which we grew up. He bought my half from me after our father died. It used to be a very quiet neighborhood with a lot of children. We would ride our bicycles in the street, explore the woods, and walk to the corner store for candy, gum, and Cokes. If we saw two vehicles on the road within one hour, it was a high traffic day. Now the store isn’t there any longer (it’s just an empty building), the woods (that don’t belong to the National Guard) have been pretty much clear cut for MORE subdivisions, and kids don’t dare ride their bicycles in the street; it’s much, much too dangerous!

     •  Reply
  27. Jp steve x
    JP Steve Premium Member over 2 years ago

    Neat! I used to go to movies at the Cedar-V (on upper Lonsdale, North Vancouver) — a Quonset/Nissan hut converted into a theatre!

     •  Reply
  28. Missing large
    STACEY MARSHALL Premium Member over 2 years ago

    The Shangri-Las “I Can Never Go Home Anymore” Extended Version!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHvf15juqmY

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From For Better or For Worse