The Mandela Effect - have you experienced it?
Comments
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ValleyGary said:Curious George didn't have a tail. I could of sworn he used to dangle from trees using it.2
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About 2 years ago I had the shock of my life discovering Rishi Sunak was short. Me and everyone I knew were under the impression he was easily 6ft+1
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follett said:About 2 years ago I had the shock of my life discovering Rishi Sunak was short. Me and everyone I knew were under the impression he was easily 6ft+0
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Scoham said:Andy Hughes played a big part on the pitch in our title winning season.
Not as much as you think. He made 5 starts and 10 sub appearances in the league.
In reality it really got moving late June and continued into early/mid July, and key players such as Hamer and Yann signed in August and September.0 -
Alwaysneil said:follett said:About 2 years ago I had the shock of my life discovering Rishi Sunak was short. Me and everyone I knew were under the impression he was easily 6ft+
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AddicksAddict said:ValleyGary said:Curious George didn't have a tail. I could of sworn he used to dangle from trees using it.3
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Scoham said:Scoham said:Andy Hughes played a big part on the pitch in our title winning season.
Not as much as you think. He made 5 starts and 10 sub appearances in the league.
In reality it really got moving late June and continued into early/mid July, and key players such as Hamer and Yann signed in August and September.1 -
The Red Robin said:Scoham said:Scoham said:Andy Hughes played a big part on the pitch in our title winning season.
Not as much as you think. He made 5 starts and 10 sub appearances in the league.
In reality it really got moving late June and continued into early/mid July, and key players such as Hamer and Yann signed in August and September.0 -
Scoham said:Scoham said:Andy Hughes played a big part on the pitch in our title winning season.
Not as much as you think. He made 5 starts and 10 sub appearances in the league.
In reality it really got moving late June and continued into early/mid July, and key players such as Hamer and Yann signed in August and September.0 - Sponsored links:
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She wrote it down for him - but he still couldn’t get it because his glasses kept falling off.5
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I clearly remember my first Charlton match with my Dad. Or at least, I think I do.
It was a packed house at the valley for an FA Cup tie under floodlights (maybe a quarter final) versus West Ham. It was so cold my Dad's mate admitted he was wearing his wife's tights under his trousers to help stay warm. I clearly remember Bill rolling up his trouser leg to reveal the tan nylon. No one appeared to be shocked or though it funny or unusual. The crowds were huge and the turnstiles became overwhelmed. The crowd surged and a crush started. I can still smell the odour of hot dogs and fried onions and peering up past the pressed male bodies to see the stars twinkling above the Valley.
As the crush grew bigger, the adults starting passing the young kids over their heads like sacks of flour. It was very calm and coordinated. With many other young boys, I was lifted by complete strangers over the roof of the turnstiles and deposited gently on the ground inside the valley where I waited for my Dad as excited fans filed past me.
He eventually appeared through the turnstiles - the old mechanical rotating clanky gates with horizontal metal arms which you feared might not fully open and trap you inside. He casually grabbed my hand without comment and we headed off to watch the match. I felt no anxiety at all.
I don’t remember the score but only the bitter (and now all too familiar) feeling of disappointment as Charlton were defeated after a spirited performance against a local rival from the league above.The weird thing is, I once tried to Google the fixture to work out when exactly it was and the final score. I could find no trace of an FA Cup tie between Charlton and West Ham in the early 1970s.
Or of Nelson Mandela ever playing right-back for Charlton Athletic.
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grumpyaddick said:
I clearly remember my first Charlton match with my Dad. Or at least, I think I do.
It was a packed house at the valley for an FA Cup tie under floodlights (maybe a quarter final) versus West Ham. It was so cold my Dad's mate admitted he was wearing his wife's tights under his trousers to help stay warm. I clearly remember Bill rolling up his trouser leg to reveal the tan nylon. No one appeared to be shocked or though it funny or unusual. The crowds were huge and the turnstiles became overwhelmed. The crowd surged and a crush started. I can still smell the odour of hot dogs and fried onions and peering up past the pressed male bodies to see the stars twinkling above the Valley.
As the crush grew bigger, the adults starting passing the young kids over their heads like sacks of flour. It was very calm and coordinated. With many other young boys, I was lifted by complete strangers over the roof of the turnstiles and deposited gently on the ground inside the valley where I waited for my Dad as excited fans filed past me.
He eventually appeared through the turnstiles - the old mechanical rotating clanky gates with horizontal metal arms which you feared might not fully open and trap you inside. He casually grabbed my hand without comment and we headed off to watch the match. I felt no anxiety at all.
I don’t remember the score but only the bitter (and now all too familiar) feeling of disappointment as Charlton were defeated after a spirited performance against a local rival from the league above.The weird thing is, I once tried to Google the fixture to work out when exactly it was and the final score. I could find no trace of an FA Cup tie between Charlton and West Ham in the early 1970s.
Or of Nelson Mandela ever playing right-back for Charlton Athletic.
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Not sure you could pass kids over your head nowadays with the size of them.4
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Big William said:grumpyaddick said:
I clearly remember my first Charlton match with my Dad. Or at least, I think I do.
It was a packed house at the valley for an FA Cup tie under floodlights (maybe a quarter final) versus West Ham. It was so cold my Dad's mate admitted he was wearing his wife's tights under his trousers to help stay warm. I clearly remember Bill rolling up his trouser leg to reveal the tan nylon. No one appeared to be shocked or though it funny or unusual. The crowds were huge and the turnstiles became overwhelmed. The crowd surged and a crush started. I can still smell the odour of hot dogs and fried onions and peering up past the pressed male bodies to see the stars twinkling above the Valley.
As the crush grew bigger, the adults starting passing the young kids over their heads like sacks of flour. It was very calm and coordinated. With many other young boys, I was lifted by complete strangers over the roof of the turnstiles and deposited gently on the ground inside the valley where I waited for my Dad as excited fans filed past me.
He eventually appeared through the turnstiles - the old mechanical rotating clanky gates with horizontal metal arms which you feared might not fully open and trap you inside. He casually grabbed my hand without comment and we headed off to watch the match. I felt no anxiety at all.
I don’t remember the score but only the bitter (and now all too familiar) feeling of disappointment as Charlton were defeated after a spirited performance against a local rival from the league above.The weird thing is, I once tried to Google the fixture to work out when exactly it was and the final score. I could find no trace of an FA Cup tie between Charlton and West Ham in the early 1970s.
Or of Nelson Mandela ever playing right-back for Charlton Athletic.
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Chizz said:Big William said:grumpyaddick said:
I clearly remember my first Charlton match with my Dad. Or at least, I think I do.
It was a packed house at the valley for an FA Cup tie under floodlights (maybe a quarter final) versus West Ham. It was so cold my Dad's mate admitted he was wearing his wife's tights under his trousers to help stay warm. I clearly remember Bill rolling up his trouser leg to reveal the tan nylon. No one appeared to be shocked or though it funny or unusual. The crowds were huge and the turnstiles became overwhelmed. The crowd surged and a crush started. I can still smell the odour of hot dogs and fried onions and peering up past the pressed male bodies to see the stars twinkling above the Valley.
As the crush grew bigger, the adults starting passing the young kids over their heads like sacks of flour. It was very calm and coordinated. With many other young boys, I was lifted by complete strangers over the roof of the turnstiles and deposited gently on the ground inside the valley where I waited for my Dad as excited fans filed past me.
He eventually appeared through the turnstiles - the old mechanical rotating clanky gates with horizontal metal arms which you feared might not fully open and trap you inside. He casually grabbed my hand without comment and we headed off to watch the match. I felt no anxiety at all.
I don’t remember the score but only the bitter (and now all too familiar) feeling of disappointment as Charlton were defeated after a spirited performance against a local rival from the league above.The weird thing is, I once tried to Google the fixture to work out when exactly it was and the final score. I could find no trace of an FA Cup tie between Charlton and West Ham in the early 1970s.
Or of Nelson Mandela ever playing right-back for Charlton Athletic.
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