Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

debm55

(54,483 posts)
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 08:58 AM Aug 2025

Thank you Midnight Rider for the suggestion. As a kid, were you a "free range kid" out of the house and doing whatever

or a helicopter kid--always under the eves of parents. I was a free range kid.

62 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Thank you Midnight Rider for the suggestion. As a kid, were you a "free range kid" out of the house and doing whatever (Original Post) debm55 Aug 2025 OP
Free range until age 18. no_hypocrisy Aug 2025 #1
Oh wow, thank you very much for sharing, no_hypocrisy. That seems different. debm55 Aug 2025 #6
semi. mom had free reighn though. AllaN01Bear Aug 2025 #2
Thank you very much, Bear. debm55 Aug 2025 #7
Definitely free range. Glorfindel Aug 2025 #3
True, Glorfindel,, When the sun was directly overhead I knew it was noon, time for lunch and when the Steel Mill whistle debm55 Aug 2025 #10
I was free range. Out after breakfast, home for lunch, gone again, then home for dinner. Polly Hennessey Aug 2025 #4
Thank you very much, Polly Hennessey. That was my schedule too. debm55 Aug 2025 #11
Free range, nature was my savior! Clouds Passing Aug 2025 #5
Same here, Clouds! SheltieLover Aug 2025 #9
Woods, crick, bike, wild berries, fruit trees, treehouse, fort, sleds, snowpeople, tree climbing, swimming..... Clouds Passing Aug 2025 #13
Mine too, Clouds Passing, Mine too. Thank you. debm55 Aug 2025 #12
Especially in the PA country.....millions of lightening bugs in the meadow Clouds Passing Aug 2025 #15
Thank you , Clouds Passing I loved the lightening bugs. too. But when it was dark, I stayed in the yard or in the alley debm55 Aug 2025 #16
Free ranger... SheltieLover Aug 2025 #8
Thank you, my fellow free ranger, SheltieLover. debm55 Aug 2025 #14
Free range, totally. catbyte Aug 2025 #17
HAHAHHAHAHAH. Oh yes, I remember. Thank you very much catbyte. debm55 Aug 2025 #20
Yes, we all were..late 60s/ early 70s. The whole family had no contact all day Demovictory9 Aug 2025 #18
That's is so right. Thank you Demovictory9 debm55 Aug 2025 #19
I think I had a pretty good combo .. FirstLight Aug 2025 #21
Thank you very much, FirstLight. You did have a wonderful childhood. debm55 Aug 2025 #27
downright feral. mopinko Aug 2025 #22
Thank you very much, mopinko. I can remember neighbors watching out for other kids that got hurt or one was bullying the debm55 Aug 2025 #28
btw, my kids were pretty free range, too. mopinko Aug 2025 #42
Thank you, mopinko. I'm afraid that my son was not free range. debm55 Aug 2025 #45
well, i have a son who def wasnt. mopinko Aug 2025 #53
Thank you mopinko, debm55 Aug 2025 #54
Free range. MIButterfly Aug 2025 #23
You are so right, I was never asked "what did you do today" I was nothing really dangerous and it was skates, bikes, debm55 Aug 2025 #29
Free Range and happy in Philadelphia Oppaloopa Aug 2025 #24
Thank you very much, Oppaloopa, I bet that was fun. debm55 Aug 2025 #30
Free range with some MuseRider Aug 2025 #25
That sounds like a wondeerful neighborhood to grow up in. Thank you so much for sharing with us.MuseRider. debm55 Aug 2025 #35
Definitely free range Cloudhopper Aug 2025 #26
Thank you very much, Cloudhopper. Bikes were magic and could take you anyplace. even if it was in your own Neighborhood. debm55 Aug 2025 #36
Farm Topomi Aug 2025 #31
Thank you very much. You did a lot of work. I bet you really enjoyed the time of being free range. Welcome to DU debm55 Aug 2025 #37
Totally free range genxlib Aug 2025 #32
I did have my Keds shoes, But I understand completely what you mean. For me, it was the slag pit from the Steel Mill. debm55 Aug 2025 #38
Free range nuxvomica Aug 2025 #33
Thank you nuxvomica. It sounds like you had a wonderful childhood, debm55 Aug 2025 #40
Free range LogDog75 Aug 2025 #34
That's very interesting. Thank you LogDog75 for sharing with us. It sounds like fun. debm55 Aug 2025 #39
Completely feral, but with accurate and explicit instruction on how not to die. hunter Aug 2025 #41
Thank you hunter, Yes, you were beyond free range. debm55 Aug 2025 #46
Sort Of ProfessorGAC Aug 2025 #43
Yep , ProfessorGAC, You were free range. debm55 Aug 2025 #47
Free range and latchkey, especially during the summer. mwmisses4289 Aug 2025 #44
Thank you mwmisses4289 for your free range memories. debm55 Aug 2025 #48
Free range within limits, depending on where we lived. When we lived in base housing, I was young enough I was pretty Dorothy V Aug 2025 #49
Yes, Dorothy V, times have changed. I agree debm55 Aug 2025 #50
Mostly free range... WestMichRad Aug 2025 #51
hahahaha, thank you, WestMichRad debm55 Aug 2025 #55
we were totally free range mike_c Aug 2025 #52
I love it, You are mike_c a true free ranger. debm55 Aug 2025 #56
FER CHRIS'SAKES HAVEN'T YOU KIDS GOT ANYTHING TO DO OUTSIDE?!? NBachers Aug 2025 #57
Hahaha Thank you, NBachers, debm55 Aug 2025 #60
I was raised in a farm. When not doing chores, I was parented with a system Ziggysmom Aug 2025 #58
Thank you very much for your post, Ziggysmom. I hope you didn't get hurt with no one watching you. debm55 Aug 2025 #61
'Free Range' doesn't even begin to describe my childhood. OldBaldy1701E Aug 2025 #59
Thank you OldBaldy1701E. I agree the absolute feeling that one had on a bike was great as a child. I too miss it. debm55 Aug 2025 #62

no_hypocrisy

(54,063 posts)
1. Free range until age 18.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:05 AM
Aug 2025

Then my father was obsessed with where I was every minute. Example: He called the town police to find me when I wasn’t home by 5:30.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
10. True, Glorfindel,, When the sun was directly overhead I knew it was noon, time for lunch and when the Steel Mill whistle
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:26 AM
Aug 2025

off, I knew it was about time for dinner. Thank you,

Polly Hennessey

(8,475 posts)
4. I was free range. Out after breakfast, home for lunch, gone again, then home for dinner.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:17 AM
Aug 2025

I had my bike, my skates, and my freedom. Being a kid was great.😊

Clouds Passing

(6,769 posts)
13. Woods, crick, bike, wild berries, fruit trees, treehouse, fort, sleds, snowpeople, tree climbing, swimming.....
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:29 AM
Aug 2025

🌈 Heaven

debm55

(54,483 posts)
16. Thank you , Clouds Passing I loved the lightening bugs. too. But when it was dark, I stayed in the yard or in the alley
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:40 AM
Aug 2025

behind my house. Too scared to go out free ranging in the dark.

catbyte

(38,509 posts)
17. Free range, totally.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:51 AM
Aug 2025

We wouldn't come home until it started to get dark or, in the summer, one of the kid's parents started yelling that dinner was ready. Then we'd all head home.

Demovictory9

(37,113 posts)
18. Yes, we all were..late 60s/ early 70s. The whole family had no contact all day
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:52 AM
Aug 2025

Dad at work
Mom at home
Kids at school or roaming the woods

FirstLight

(15,755 posts)
21. I think I had a pretty good combo ..
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:09 AM
Aug 2025

My dad built our house in the oakland hills that he grew up playing in, so they advocated for that kind of play. (It was the late 70's-early 80's and there were also plenty of kids so we had a little group)...
But my mom was also pretty overprotective of me, she knew I was the "runt" of the kid group and my sister was not big on protecting me (she was the bully much of the time) so she'd hear me having trouble with them in the driveway and would conviently call me upstairs to "help" her bake cookies or something to get me out of the struggle...
She also insisted on driving us to school, no bus. and often was one of the 'parent drivers' on field trips.

But gosh! Do I have memories of roller skating in the neighbor's long driveway with one of the neighbor girls for HOURS. we'd meet at the tree af6ter Saturday morning cartoons and chores, and spend the day riding bikes, making rope swings, etc

In 1977, my Dad bought 40 acres in the redwoods, and we spent a lot of weekends up there - After breakfast, I'd pack a lunch and go into the woods and spend hours by myself sitting in the trees, singing to the animals like snow white.

God I had a really great childhood! Thanks, Mom & Dad

mopinko

(73,239 posts)
22. downright feral.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:11 AM
Aug 2025

i was the 6th of 7. the older kids had more hovering, but not that much. at 5 my oldest sister once walked the mile to see her grandpa. pretty much mothered by that sister.
there were eyes all over the hood, tho. whether it was getting in trouble or getting hurt, there were many ppl watching over me.

my house was the 1 where the other kids liked to hang, tho. always food in the fridge, had a color tv early on. and a well stocked liquor cabinet!

debm55

(54,483 posts)
28. Thank you very much, mopinko. I can remember neighbors watching out for other kids that got hurt or one was bullying the
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:36 AM
Aug 2025

the others. Thank you for the memories.

mopinko

(73,239 posts)
42. btw, my kids were pretty free range, too.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 12:34 PM
Aug 2025

my 1st born, 1975, in my small hometown, used to love to go to the drug store for a paper, at 4. she’d get money for a candy bar. she used to go visit neighbors. she was 1 of those kids who cd talk to adults for hours.
the other 4, 10 yrs younger+, were raised in the big city. they werent feral enough, as far as i was concerned. but by their teen yrs, they were riding the cta, and had friends all over town.
middle child had a pager and then a cell phone, cuz it was the only way to keep track of her.

mopinko

(73,239 posts)
53. well, i have a son who def wasnt.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 04:21 PM
Aug 2025

didnt know it then, but on the spectrum. he once refused to knock on the door of his buddy next door, knowing that another friend had brought his nintendo over.
i just let him b.

MIButterfly

(1,812 posts)
23. Free range.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:13 AM
Aug 2025

We all were. Those were definitely different times. I would be gone all day only going home to eat.

I don't remember even being asked "What did you do today?"

debm55

(54,483 posts)
29. You are so right, I was never asked "what did you do today" I was nothing really dangerous and it was skates, bikes,
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:40 AM
Aug 2025

playing with Barbies.I didn't have a watch, but watching the sun and hearing the Mill siren you knew it was time to go home to eat,

MuseRider

(35,083 posts)
25. Free range with some
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:25 AM
Aug 2025

boundaries but they were large enough to feel free.

We had a lot of open fields in and around our neighborhood with creeks to play in. Lots of good bicycle riding neighborhood streets that were totally safe then.

Once I hit about 5th grade that stopped because it was time for me to learn to be what the boys will be looking for, a good housewife. THAT was not MY plan so it was harder to have any fun but I managed to get some in. We had a woods right behind our house and my mother was terrified of it so that was a great option to hang alone and sing or just mess around until my Dad came home.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
35. That sounds like a wondeerful neighborhood to grow up in. Thank you so much for sharing with us.MuseRider.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 11:21 AM
Aug 2025

Cloudhopper

(160 posts)
26. Definitely free range
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:30 AM
Aug 2025

Especially when I inherited my brother's bike. My BFF and I went everywhere.

Four kids and mom in a 4 room apartment, she loved when we were all out.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
36. Thank you very much, Cloudhopper. Bikes were magic and could take you anyplace. even if it was in your own Neighborhood.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 11:24 AM
Aug 2025

Topomi

(42 posts)
31. Farm
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:46 AM
Aug 2025

In summer after corn got to tall for cultivating, beans no longer needed picking, hay was in and cows taken care of free range.😊

debm55

(54,483 posts)
37. Thank you very much. You did a lot of work. I bet you really enjoyed the time of being free range. Welcome to DU
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 11:25 AM
Aug 2025

genxlib

(6,067 posts)
32. Totally free range
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:46 AM
Aug 2025

Half the time without shoes.

It is a miracle that we survived when I think about the places we used to play unsupervised.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
38. I did have my Keds shoes, But I understand completely what you mean. For me, it was the slag pit from the Steel Mill.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 11:29 AM
Aug 2025

Tons of fun. And of course Biking.

nuxvomica

(13,844 posts)
33. Free range
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:50 AM
Aug 2025

Especially in the summer, when we'd just have to be home for dinner. If we weren't, my mom would stand on the front porch and shout our names. But we did have one helicopter, our dog Poppy, a beagle-Sheltie mix, who was always dozing just in sight wherever our adventures took us. She had slowed down since the car-chasing days of her youth but always made sure she was around for our protection.

LogDog75

(1,046 posts)
34. Free range
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 10:56 AM
Aug 2025

My dad was a navy officer so up to the age 13 I grew up on Navy baes which were fairly safe. On NAS Memphis, he had run of most of the base. There was a large, opened field in base housing where we’d meet up with other kids and play baseball and football as well as walking to and staying at the base pool all day during the summer. We’d stay outside from mid-morning until lunch, after lunch until our parents called us in for dinner, and then after dinner until it was time for bed. Often times, we’d sneak off-base by crawling under the base’s perimeter fence and walk and walk about a mile to the local 5-and-dime store for candy. The early 60s were were a good time to be a kid.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
39. That's very interesting. Thank you LogDog75 for sharing with us. It sounds like fun.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 12:14 PM
Aug 2025

hunter

(40,310 posts)
41. Completely feral, but with accurate and explicit instruction on how not to die.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 12:23 PM
Aug 2025

Much more explicit than any other kid I knew got.

My dad would be at work or night school or fishing and my mom would be hammering away at her typewriter, God save anyone who interrupted her.

We were expected to make our own breakfast and lunch, sometimes dinners, do our own laundry, and look after one another.

My parents grew up in a similar fashion, my mom in much more dangerous environments, either gritty urban environments or shipped off to her grandparents' ranch which was about as far away from civilization as you could get in the 48 states.

I guess my mom figured we were safe in the suburbs.

When we did spend family time together it was high quality time, especially travelling, which we did quite a lot of. My parents behaved much like feral children themselves when we were traveling, they never had any fixed itinerary.

ProfessorGAC

(75,611 posts)
43. Sort Of
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 12:49 PM
Aug 2025

We lived a few hundred feet from a big city park with baseball diamonds & basketball hoops.
We were there practically every day in the summer by the time we were 8. It was "Mom, I'm going to play baseball." & I was gone for a couple hours.
We weren't far, but none of us kids had parents who could see the park from the house.
By 9 or 10, we'd go bike riding though I doubt we ever got more than a couple miles from home.
I lived a mile or so from school and walked or rode my bike every day it wasn't winter cold or raining.
My parents wanted to know where I was, but there was no leash nor was there hovering.
Not sure if that's free range" or not.

mwmisses4289

(3,011 posts)
44. Free range and latchkey, especially during the summer.
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 01:38 PM
Aug 2025

Mom and dad both worked. Only caveat was we had to call them at work to let them know where we're going.

Dorothy V

(437 posts)
49. Free range within limits, depending on where we lived. When we lived in base housing, I was young enough I was pretty
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 02:48 PM
Aug 2025

much limited to our cul-de-sac. One place out in the desert there was noplace to go unless I wanted to count tumbleweeds and avoid rattlers. Another place I was forbidden to cross the highway - US395, and was not tempted to break that rule: the town had a speed limit but cars ran down that road like there was no such thing as speed limits, and the town didn't have a PD to enforce anything (the town relied on the County Sheriff and his deputies, and it being the largest county in the US I expect they were spread too thin to pay all that much attention to speeders). Otherwise, I was pretty much all over the place, limited only by how long it would take me to get back home for meals.
Our boys were free range too, but nowadays, if I had my grandkids, no way in hell!

mike_c

(36,886 posts)
52. we were totally free range
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 04:11 PM
Aug 2025

If we weren't in school, my parents usually had little idea where we were or how we got there.

Ziggysmom

(3,997 posts)
58. I was raised in a farm. When not doing chores, I was parented with a system
Tue Aug 12, 2025, 09:31 PM
Aug 2025

of benign neglect. Both parents were always working and spent little time watching me.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
61. Thank you very much for your post, Ziggysmom. I hope you didn't get hurt with no one watching you.
Wed Aug 13, 2025, 08:58 AM
Aug 2025

OldBaldy1701E

(9,889 posts)
59. 'Free Range' doesn't even begin to describe my childhood.
Wed Aug 13, 2025, 08:31 AM
Aug 2025

More like 'There and Back Again'! (That was the name of the story that Bilbo Baggins had written in 'The Lord Of The Rings'. It is basically the story told in 'The Hobbit'.)

When I was around nine, my parents once were unable to find me. They drove around the wilderness looking for me. (We lived in the absolute sticks, so there was nothing but trees and a few farms.) They finally found me at a boy's house about ten miles from our place. They were not happy, but had never said not to ride ten miles away from the house, so...

I was one of those 'ride my bike all day' types until I was around 13-14. I used to ride my bike 15 miles to take drivers ed.

I mis being able to do that anymore. Very much.

debm55

(54,483 posts)
62. Thank you OldBaldy1701E. I agree the absolute feeling that one had on a bike was great as a child. I too miss it.
Wed Aug 13, 2025, 09:03 AM
Aug 2025
Latest Discussions»The DU Lounge»Thank you Midnight Rider ...