Toys R Us
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the feels i feel from probably another country
(i’m from australia; most people that would post this i assume are US)
We also miss Toys R Us in the UK 😢
Hard part about being an immigrant. I am permanently detached from all the places from my childhood
I feel that. Went back home for a visit last year and so much has changed. It's bizarre, feeling disconnected from where I live and yet like home has moved on without me.
The Texas from my childhood, most Texans dont give a shit about identity politics, you would think there are a bunch of brown hating cowboys - that was not the case Texas was incredibly tolerant.
someone messed with Texas. I do believe there were specific instructions against doing so.
.
I feel the same way about my home state. The hate and bigotry in the area is just heartbreaking. Maybe I was just too young to see it was always there.
There was a forest we use to play in behind my friends house . It had a few giant trees. They must have been hundreds of years old. One was 3-4 meters in diameter. We used to climb them using the coarse bark up to the branches and see how high we could go. You could see the whole neighborhood. Wonderful memories.
That whole area is filled with Mcmansions now.
This happened on a much smaller scale to me. My grandparent's home was demolished to make way for a McMansion after they sold it. They were the only people to ever live in that beautiful house.
Same where I grew up, worst part was the developer bought it like two decades ago, sat on it for five ish years (logged a single dirt road), then put in paved roads/utilities and a demo house for another five with empty lots cut, and the last ten or so have built maybe four more. So it's not even utilized, they cut down huge swaths of forest and it's just sat most of the time.
We had an incredible ravine that got destroyed for a highway that I've driven many times as an adult. It's a rare trip that I don't think back to the beautiful place where I spent countless hours of summer breaks being wild and free.
You can't step in the same river twice. ~ Heraclitus.
I'm just glad I realized this early as I did. I made sure to cherish each place, knowing full well it would eventually disappear.
Two big ones for me:
1- a local arcade. Spent so many summer days there with friends. TMNT, Street fighter, Mortal Kombat, etc etc etc.
2- laser quest! Lots of birthday parties there.
being able to go out alone in the woods at the age of 8-12 or just go down to your friends house. or have any unsupervised time alone time.
The mall. Technically it's still there, but it's a shell of its former self.
The mall I used to ride my bike to as a child, where my favorite Arcade (Aladdin's Castle) & had a toy store (K.B. Toys) was leveled to the ground about 20 years ago, with the exception of like two restaurants at the corner of the building.
It's now some fake ass 'downtown' like outdoor mall, in Michigan, with terrible parking & it's just gross.
I miss Meadowbrook Mall, man, I miss it a lot.
I was gonna say "The Arcade" but you made me remember the entire mall it resided in got blown up.
The farm I grew up on. They flattened this HUGE hill to do it as well. They removed a creek, natural lake, and tons of forest. For a flat, treeless, subdivision.
Depressing, I'm sorry you had to see that happen.Theres is something about never wanting the place you grew up to never change.
USSR
East Germany
Yugoslavia
Czechoslovakia
Amiga (oh, I hate Commodore eternally...)
Rotary phones
Incandescent light bulbs
I could do this all day ;)
edit: yeah, these are not things that were just "around the corner", but it is amazing how much world changes actually and we are so used to it
Every block Buster video i went to lol
Just video rental stores in general. In my area there was a little rental place called "video to go". It was a small, and probably unremarkable as far as video stores go. Pretty much your stereotypical small town rental place. Every once in a while my dad would take us there to pick out a movie and some snacks for the evening.
That place went out of business long ago, and you can't even recognize the building anymore it's been remodeled so many times. We had a family video move into town after video to go went under, and they stuck around until family video went out of business. I miss being able to actually go somewhere to pick out a movie rather than mindlessly flipping through a streaming catalog.
This goofy ass restaurant that served the food to your table on model trains: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKoCam8WqC4
RIP, their food was probably just OK but I was a little kid so it was all totally amazing.
As a bonus, the very end of this video has one of the old Seattle trolleys, which also aren't around anymore.
The World Of Sid And Marty Krofft in Atlanta. It was a mindfuck of an indoor amusement park located in what's now CNN Center. Granted, it was only open for six months in 1976, but I was able to go, and as a six year-old kid, it was amazing.
There used to be an ice cream place near where I grew up. Old style bar with stools to sit at while you ate ice cream and a huge ball pit with a slide. I loved that place growing up and it's sad that kids now can't experience it. I'm sure there are places like that out there somewhere, but not anywhere close to that area.
Leaps And Bounds, and Discovery Zone. Not sure if they were local only (St. Louis, MO) but they were sort of combination arcades/jungle gyms for kids to go to.
We had a Discovery zone in PR when I was little too!
Showbiz Pizza and their crazy looking animatronics
My Secondary (High) School - levelled to build houses a few years ago.
If this had happened when I was still a pupil I would have been overjoyed to turn up for School one day and find a pile of rubble instead, but now I feel a bit sad at the destruction of a bit of my personal history.
I graduated high school in 2000. we where the last free range generation, the next year high spiked security fences started going up around schools.
I couldn't imagine going to school behind a locked gate, man fuck that shit.
Swensen's Ice Cream shop.
@weremacaque it sounds flippant but seriously: The USA. I find this current view of my home country to be unrecognizably insane...we played outside, we drank and smoked early and generally got along. I grew up in an integrated neighborhood, integrated public school...
Bunch of my childhood town is now just more buildings. Used to be more forest and now there's nothing but slabs of concrete. This small mall that used to be there? Buildings now, just tons of buildings.
We had an amusement park called Geauga Lake close to where I grew up in Ohio. Not quite as big as the famous Cedar Point park which was a couple of hours away by car, but it had quite a history, and was a really popular one for school trips, company picnics, etc. It went through some ownership changes, and was eventually closed and left to rot with many of the original structures still sitting there after the coaster parts were sold off. Haven't looked into it for a number of years, but it was weird seeing that same entrance building we walked through so many times just decaying.
I used to go on holiday every year in a cottage on the cliffs near East Yorkshire, UK. In about 1998 it was condemned so we moved to holiday park just up the coast.in about 2014 some big storms happened and we came back and all the homes on the whole seaward side of the road were gone and the old inlandside were now clifftop with a new road behind
Sega World Sydney. It was a whole theme park based around Sega properties in Sydney, Australia. Rides themed around classic Sega arcade games, Sonic paraphernalia everywhere, a huge arcade and overpriced Sega merch shop. One ride entirely took place in virtual reality, with headsets for everybody. I wasn't even a Sega kid, but it was amazing.
The Computer Museum in Boston; one of my favorite places to visit as a computer-obsessed kid.
If this water park is “across the street” (freeway) from an amusement park I think I know what you’re talking about. If not, then my answer is the same. Water park that my family went to and it closed in 2020. I miss not having worries and playing in the water. And also how Dippin dots was the ice cream of the future (for decades now)
Gosh, so many places.
It just so happened that the house I currently live in is literally down the street from the hospital where I was born . . . or at least, where it used to be. They closed down and demolished that hospital and built a new one across the city. All that's left in that lot is piles of rubble. The new hospital is legitimately a better one with a lot of great improvements and upgrades, but I still miss being able to walk up the street and look up at the old building and go "I was born in there :)"
Two of the schools I went to as a kid have also long since been bulldozed. Recently, though, a new school went up on the lot where the oldest one used to be (after at least a decade of just being an empty field), and it looks really nice.
Six Flags AstroWorld. I still can't believe it's gone, and still can't believe it's a freakin' parking lot now.
Soviet Union. Not necessarily a bad thing, but there is some nostalgia...
There used to be a nice little place in the woods, near my house, where people used to walk their dogs, light off fireworks, smoke a little weed and just get out of the house to hang out. There used to be a little ranger shack out there because it used to be a place where people would go as an actual park before it became run down. About 10 years ago some development company associated with the New England Patriots announced that they were going to build an indoor sports field thing for soccer and flag football and stuff like that. Long story short none of that happened and what the company did was they worked with the city to start tearing down old buildings from all around the city, and then dumping the debris and waste in the area. They promised they would build a sports facility in. Needless to say, local residents were shocked and appalled because it was in a heavy residential neighborhood less than a half mile from a school, and it was completely illegal and unethical. I proceeded to contact every local newspaper, and even Erin Brockovich and her foundation. To date nothing has been done really about the gigantic piles of waste in building debris, except that the company was ordered to stop doing so in a town meeting where a state reps showed up.
My elementary school was heavily renovated the year after I "graduated" sixth grade. It's not the same place anymore, and I have a lot of memories and nostalgia tied up with that old building — among other things, it's where I met the woman who'd become my wife.
The Kindergarten I went to doesn't exist any more.