Thursday, March 11, 2021

SOL March 11: Ancient Expenses

I spent more time than I wanted to today looking for bank statements from 2010 — which I no longer have. The bank doesn’t have them either; they purge records after seven years. But in the bottom of a closet I found some really old checks, as well as the lease for an apartment my husband and I lived in, in the mid-1960s.

            So what did things cost more than 50 years ago? Rent for that small but recently renovated apartment was $135 a month, and that seemed like a lot of money at the time. A therapy session cost $12.50. A doctor’s visit was only $5.

            And W-2 forms. For eight months of work at a new job, as copy boy at the New York Post, my husband earned $3,170. For a full year of work as a secretary at Bantam Books, I earned $3,804. And we lived a normal life, eating out, drinking in bars, going to the movies (probably $2.50 or less; a movie ticket didn’t go to $5 until 1972, and I remember the first film we saw at that exhorbitant rate, “Last Tango in Paris”).

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I’m participating in the 14th annual Slice of Life Challenge over at Two Writing Teachers. This is day 11 of the 31-day challenge.  It’s not too late to make space for daily writing in a community that is encouraging, enthusiastic, and eager to read what you have to slice about.  Join in!

 

4 comments:

  1. So crazy to think about the world through numbers! I remember when a McDonald's hamburger was fifteen cents!

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    1. yes! I used to get a Chock Full-of-Nuts lunch of cream-cheese sandwich and orange drink for a quarter.

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  2. Seeing old prices is always so wild. Were prices in NYC dramatically different than in Westchester, do you think? I know I used to go to the movies as a little kid (7 and 8 years old) for less than a dollar. Maybe 50 cents! Would be lovely to have some of those prices back!

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  3. It's always so interesting and fun to look back at old papers, with the memories they jog. Even more amazing to have them highlight how much things have changed.--Or some things--the activities and the feelings about them seem fairly constant. It's sort of like looking back at old slices, isn't it?--getting glimpses and reminders of our past life.

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