I grew up on a pacific Island, walking around in barefoot as a kid was wonderful and I hated shoe's, they felt so uncomfortable and I always had to take them off even at school. If one looks it up, walking barefoot is good for brain development, particularly on sand.
Yes 🌻🌻🌻🌻love it, we did this in the 80's too, no school uniform unless you wanted to wear it, and no hats, and not all the rules of today 🌻🌻🌻🌻such happy memories of wonderful principle, teachers, groundsman, cleaners, office staff and parent helpers and students. One parent who volunteered at our tuckshop regularly just died at 88, a beautiful soul. Extremely grounded and happy and friendly times 🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻
And I used to get to school between 7am and 7.30am with no teacher supervision and we would play Bedlam, Red Rover and football until classes started which included the semi-regular fist fight and the loss of every button on my school shirt .... great days.
All those kids had ordinary Aussie accents except for the one who said he was new to the island, he had some kind of British accent. Also two women speaking at the preschool had hybrid American-Australian accents and one had a New Zealand accent. The post office owner had a Malaysian or Singaporean accent.
They sound normal to me, apart from the boy at 1:40 he sounds english not aussie. Different parts of australia do have different accents. The news reporter has a pretty posh accent but they usually do
In New Zealand, the kids go barefoot too 🥰 But it's mostly because our country is so poor and our cost of living is so high that families can't afford shoes.
This is how every kid should grow: close to the nature and being a part of the community as a first class citizen. ❤
Being barefoot reduces the risk of musculoskeletal pains 👏 one step ahead! 🤩
I grew up on a pacific Island, walking around in barefoot as a kid was wonderful and I hated shoe's, they felt so uncomfortable and I always had to take them off even at school. If one looks it up, walking barefoot is good for brain development, particularly on sand.
How wonderful 🦘🇦🇺
Yes 🌻🌻🌻🌻love it, we did this in the 80's too, no school uniform unless you wanted to wear it, and no hats, and not all the rules of today 🌻🌻🌻🌻such happy memories of wonderful principle, teachers, groundsman, cleaners, office staff and parent helpers and students. One parent who volunteered at our tuckshop regularly just died at 88, a beautiful soul. Extremely grounded and happy and friendly times 🌻🌻🌻🌻🌻
52 now and still mostly barefoot 😊
I did my Primary School years in Brisbane in the 1960's and didn't wear a pair of shoes to school until I went to High School.
And I used to get to school between 7am and 7.30am with no teacher supervision and we would play Bedlam, Red Rover and football until classes started which included the semi-regular fist fight and the loss of every button on my school shirt .... great days.
Yep. It’s grounding. Very important for good health
Come on !!!
Its like this in New Zealand as well.
Not like that. Lord Howe Island is equivalent to the Chathams here.
Brilliant, and I bet there allowed to sing Christmas carols.😊
*They're.
வணக்கம் தோழர்களே அழகான பதிவு வாழ்த்துக்கள் இந்தியாவில் இருந்து தமிழ் நாட்டு வாசகி அங்கு வேலை இருந்தால் சொல்லவும் பெண் வயது 43.
Do these kids have an ordinary aussie accent? Or is this a dialect?
All those kids had ordinary Aussie accents except for the one who said he was new to the island, he had some kind of British accent. Also two women speaking at the preschool had hybrid American-Australian accents and one had a New Zealand accent. The post office owner had a Malaysian or Singaporean accent.
Normal accent
Went to school there from 1990 -1994 was great to see this report
They sound normal to me, apart from the boy at 1:40 he sounds english not aussie. Different parts of australia do have different accents. The news reporter has a pretty posh accent but they usually do
In New Zealand, the kids go barefoot too 🥰 But it's mostly because our country is so poor and our cost of living is so high that families can't afford shoes.
Im in NZ and have most kids do not go to school barefoot, you are talking about a minority.
Since The Nat's got it. For sure.
Aren't we the barefoot originals.
Just because your barefoot doesn't mean your poor! 😒 I gave up shoes nearly 9 years ago at the age of 25, and I hope I'll never wear them ever again!
Ohh what a memories...
Especially when the soles of my feet being pricked by the thorn/splinter.
I didn't grow up going bare feet
Me either, and I regret it very much now :( but I became a fulltime barefooter at 25, so it's not too late for you either
So if a student wore black shoes to school the student would be rebuked and disciplined.