" I ’m so beaming it ’s no longer common to fume inside construction . Back then , you choke everywhere , and mostly everyone was smoking — no matter if it was on an airplane , in a restaurant , in a hospital , in the car , etc . "

1.“Jellies, the shoes. OMG, they were bad then, and I have no idea why I see them for sale now. They’re blister factories and stink as an insult to injury.”

— jadefishes

2.“Having to go to the movies without a pre-purchased ticket or assigned seat was a hassle. You’d have to wait in long lines to sit in lousy seats or find out the show was sold out.”

— buzzmonkey27

3.“What was with all the feather roach clips in the late ’70s and early ’80s? They looked so very, very dumb, and I often thought many teens who wore them did not know what they were.”

— lazychef337

4.“Can we just talk about ’80s frizzy hair for a moment? It looked good on exactly no one. Why were we doing so much damage to our hair with all that ratting and crimping? HOW did it ever become a trend?! I want answers! LOL.”

— 39 , Arizona

5.“Smoking inside buildings. For a non-smoker, it’s literally one of the worst and most suffocating smells. So glad I don’t have to smell like an ashtray anymore after visiting a restaurant!”

— 39 , Illinois

" I ’m glad about the smoking thing . Back then , you went everywhere , and mostly everyone was fume — no matter if it was on an airplane , in a restaurant , in a hospital , in the railway car , etc . I even think when I went out of doors with my friends , and every prison term I came home , all of my clothes had that frightening olfactory modality of smoke , even though I had never smoke in my life . I ’m beaming it ’s more controlled these days . "

— 39 , Colombia

A close-up of a person's foot wearing a light green, intricately designed Jelly sandal with visible red-painted toenails

6.“Parachute pants. They even made a brief comeback a few years ago. Why, though?”

— 42 , USA

— 68 , Montana

8.“Casseroles were just gross. So many moms made these every day. What a way to waste good ingredients or not a good way to use crappy ingredients. Why not just put the ingredients in a blender and drink with a straw? That’s about how appetizing it was.”

— 46 , USA

9.“Having only one landline phone in the kitchen and being on a party line! When I was a teen back in the day, I would stretch the curly cord on the phone hand-piece so I could hide under the kitchen table to talk to my boyfriend or other friends. I’m not sure why I thought nobody could hear me there; my parents were usually sitting in the living room just around the corner and could probably hear everything I said.”

" If not them , someone on the party line was most always listening ! No privateness ever ! ! ! "

— Anonymous ,   North Carolina

10.“Riding without seatbelts. I remember being made fun of for always buckling up, even into the mid-’90s. However, my grandfather was a highway patrolman in rural Wisconsin before all cars had restraints. Those are the people who literally patrol the rural roads, looking for motorists needing assistance. Well, Grandpa was often first on the scene of many accidents, and he said the worst ones were where people got ejected because they were not wearing a seatbelt. Please be safe and buckle up.”

— 39 , Texas

11.“Paper maps that need folding. The thought of trying to decipher if you were going in the right direction with appropriate exits to your destination.”

— 52 , Wisconsin

12.“We wore ‘poodle skirts’ with five to six crinolines underneath. Those crinolines were so scratchy, and the whole deal (the skirt and crinolines) made sitting at a desk an origami exercise. To top off our poodle skirts, we also wore cardigan sweaters buttoned up the back.”

— 83 , Wisconsin

13.“Does anyone remember the Flock of Seagulls-esque bangs that women had for a few minutes at the beginning of the ’90s? We do because we have pictures of my sister proudly sporting them at school! LOL. They were hair-sprayed almost straight up from the forehead and swept slightly to the side. They gaveSomething About Maryvibes before that even existed.”

— 43 , USA

14.“Harvest gold and puke green home colors (furniture, appliances, paint, decor, etc.) of the ’70s. Ugly then and ugly now.”

15.“Pagers, beepers. It was kinda neat at first, and then, it just seemed annoying. It was cute to send my boyfriend an 8-3-1 page, though, which means ‘I love you’ (eight letters, three words, one meaning). It’s so cringey now, LOL. Glad they are not really a thing anymore.”

— 47 , USA

16.“Low-rise jeans. I absolutely hate that these are making a comeback. It’s so unflattering, and no matter what, you’ll be showing some crack sitting down or bending over. … If the G-string peaking out makes a comeback, too, I will freak out.”

— 42 , Maryland

17.“They were called Earth Shoes. The soles were configured so that the heel of the shoe was lower than the toe. I think this was supposed to be better for your back/posture. I had a pair in seventh grade. Looking back, they were the ugliest shoes ever made, and I wouldn’t be caught dead in them now — not even to a ’70s-themed party; they were that bad.”

— 59 , Illinois

Note : Some responses have been edit for length and/or clearness .

Hair clip accessory with purple feathers hanging from strings

Two women smiling at a party, wearing 1970s outfits with striped patterns, one holds a cigarette

A mid-century modern living room featuring a white sofa, a wicker chair, a glass coffee table on a red shag carpet, and a wall-mounted painting with plants

A close-up of a desk phone's handset resting on its coiled cord atop a wooden surface

A person is holding a map inside a car as they drive on an open highway

Two people in a backstage dressing room. One, in the foreground, is blow-drying their hair while seated; another stands in the background wearing sunglasses

Motorola Bravo Express pager, displaying "NO PAGES" on screen, with its clip cover placed beside it on a wooden surface

A pair of worn brown leather shoes with laces, placed on a wooden surface