🇮🇪 10 Signs You Grew Up in Ireland
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Growing up in Ireland wasn’t just a childhood — it was a survival course in weather prediction, creative heating solutions, and understanding that “grand” could mean absolutely anything.
If the following feels less like reading and more like being personally exposed, congratulations. You had a proper Irish upbringing.
1. You Had to “Put On a Jumper” Instead of Turning On the Heat
You could be visibly hypothermic.
Lips blue. Hands numb.
And still the answer was:
“Put on a jumper.”
The heating was considered a last resort. Possibly illegal.
2. You Checked All Four Seasons Before School
You’d wake up to:
Rain
Sun
Wind
Hail
All before 9am.
And still be sent out in “a light jacket.”
3. Tayto Sandwiches Were a Legitimate Meal
Not a snack.
A meal.
Two slices of white bread. Butter. And a packet of Tayto crisps destroyed in the middle.
Gourmet.
4. You Were Warned About “The Immersion” Like It Was a Loaded Weapon
You never touched it.
You didn’t know what it did.
But you knew this:
It would bankrupt the family.
5. “The Angelus” Meant Everything Stopped
The second it came on RTÉ…
Everyone went silent.
Even the dog respected it.
Nobody knew why.
Nobody questioned it.
6. You Owned “Good Clothes” You Were Never Allowed Wear
These clothes were for:
Mass
Weddings
Funerals
Possibly meeting the President
But never for actual fun.
7. Your Mother Answered Questions With Questions
You’d say:
“Mam, where’s my charger?”
She’d reply:
“Where did you leave it?”
Which was absolutely no help whatsoever.
8. The Late Late Show Was Basically Law
If the The Late Late Show was on, that was the evening sorted.
You didn’t always understand it.
But you watched it.
Because everyone did.
9. You Said “Sorry” When Someone Else Bumped Into You
Full apology.
Possibly took the blame.
Offered compensation.
Standard behaviour.
10. The Smell of Turf Smoke Still Stops You in Your Tracks
You could be anywhere in the world.
London. New York. Sydney.
And if you catch that smell…
You’re suddenly 8 years old again.
Standing in your childhood home.
Warm. Safe. Half watching television.
And someone’s saying:
“Close that door, you’re letting the heat out.”
Check out the true replication right here!
Final Thoughts
Growing up in Ireland gave us:
Thick skin
Fast reflexes (from sudden rain)
And an emotional attachment to smells, food, and sayings that make absolutely no sense to anyone else
And somehow…
We wouldn’t change a single second of it.