Looking around our kitchen, I’m amazed by the number of appliances that make life so much easier than what it was like when I was growing up in the 1940s. Most of them weren’t even invented, or only rich people possessed relatively undeveloped versions of what they’re like today. Touring our kitchen, we have the central heating boiler, fridge freezer, electric kettle, toaster, dishwasher, water softener, washing machine, bread maker, and my indispensable combined microwave, grill and electric oven. I do have a slow cooker but seldom use it, so given a choice, that could go, as could the oven part of the electric cooker, below the hob, as I almost never use that unless cooking for the whole family, in the ‘olden days!’ . Then in the rest of the house, garage and garden shed, there are multiple tools and appliances, from the garden shredder to hedge cutter, the electric drill to my electric sewing machine, which not only make life easier but on the whole do jobs to a better standard, that weren’t possible before, and of course the TV. We had our first TV in 1956, all grey and grainy, all two programmes, or was it three by then?
Most of all, I wonder now how I managed before broadband and my trusty iPad, without which we wouldn’t be talking to each other now, learning about the world and its news, and above all keeping in touch with our families during the many months when we can’t see them.