I was born on April 29, 1956, a Sunday in a Leap Year. Little did I know of the significance Leap Year would have for me just 40 years later. I was born part of the Baby Boomer Generation in Superior, Wisconsin, the second of my parents, Allen and Collene Spencer’s five daughters. Of course they didn’t know it then, but they would have five daughters, and no sons. My due date was April 27, and they would have loved it if I had arrived that day, because that was my dad’s birthday. One additional note, since my older sister was a girl, I was “supposed to be” a boy…oops. Well, you might say that I messed everything up. Good thing that my parents decided that they would keep me. Hahahahaha!! Of course, there was never a question on that.

That year found prices like fresh eggs (1 dozen): $0.60 ($6.48 in today’s dollars), White bread (1 pound): $0.18 ($2.12 in today’s dollars), Sliced bacon (1 pound): $0.57 ($6.70 in today’s dollars), Round steak (1 pound): $0.88 ($10.35 in today’s dollars), Potatoes (10 pounds): $0.68 ($7.99 in today’s dollars), and Fresh delivered milk (1/2 gallon): $0.48 ($5.64 in today’s dollars). What most of us wouldn’t give for prices like that these days. In addition, more and more Americans were going places, and car sales that year would prove that. President Dwight D Eisenhower signed legislation to construct an interstate highway system in 1956, leading to the creation of thousands of construction jobs as well as an increase in the number of roadside businesses. That would be vital in our nation’s future. It was a good year for workers too, as the minimum wage was raised to $1 per hour, which was an increase of 25 cents. As we look on these things today, they seem to be such trivial amounts, but at one dollar an hour, I don’t suppose the prices charged for those things was such a bargain.

You could buy a house, depending on the size, of course, for somewhere between $11,700 and $22,000. Ford model cars coming off the factory line in 1956 ranged from $1,748 to $3,151. Filling up the gas tank of that fancy new car would cost a whopping 22 cents per gallon. A college education at private universities like Harvard and Radcliffe rose from $800 to $1,000 for a full year, including dorm and food. State colleges like the University of Wisconsin were $675 per year for out-of-state students and a mere $225 for students already residing in the state. Rent varied, depending on whether you lived in a boarding house or an apartment, but on average, folks were spending about $88 per month. You only needed three pennies to purchase a first-class stamp for your letters in 1956, and the post offices wonders why people don’t send much in the mail today.

As I look at my own life, and the many changes that have taken place over the years, I know that I am definitely in the best place for me, my talents, and abilities. The Bible was right where it says in Esther 4:14, “For if you remain completely silent at this time, relief and deliverance will arise for the Jews from another place, but you and your father’s house will perish. Yet who knows whether you have come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” I think that is true. The abilities I have would not have worked in Biblical times, in the Old West, or even in the 1950s. This is my time, and I am best here. Today, I am 69 years old. I’m probably not typical for my age. I am a Christian, a Conservative, a techie, a wife, a mother, a grandmother, a great grandmother, a caregiver, a retired insurance agent, and a writer, and I have loved each and every one of my life’s occupations.

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