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10 fabulous things we take for granted

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You take a headache tablet, phone a friend, have a dental cavity filled, and hop into your car.

There's a lot we take for granted. We stress about pollution and global warming, crashing markets and sub-woofers. But we don't have to cook over an open fire and have a baby every year.

Among the things for which we should be eternally grateful are:

Proper soap. Imagine trying to keep yourself, your house and your clothes clean with no proper soap or household detergents. In effect, all you would be doing is shuffling the dirt about. Without grease-cutting detergents, soap was mostly ineffective. People washed clothes in rivers (admittedly, rivers may have been cleaner in the days before industrial pollution) and slammed them against the stones in an effort to get rid of dirt and stains.

Medication. Anaesthetics, vitamin tablets, painkillers, antibiotics, vaccines and antiseptics. Infections, unbearable pain, operations without anaesthetics and fatal childhood diseases were common when Granny was conceived. There were no headache tablets and your chances of dying from infection after an operation were very high. People died because of a burst appendix, kidney stones and small infections. In short, they died of all sorts of things, which today would be treated with a short course of antibiotics.

Medical staff. Imagine being really ill, or having excruciating toothache and not being able to go to your dentist or GP. At least today, in most countries, one can go to a state hospital or clinic of some sorts. Okay, sometimes the travelling kind only comes around once a week, but at least it comes. You might have to wait hours in a queue, but relief or at least a correct diagnosis should follow once you get to the front.

Contraceptives. It was the fate of women for many generations to have a baby every year - either that or celibacy. Many modern women, if given the choice between having 16 children or joining a convent, would opt for the latter. Today, planning a family is easy and costs nothing if you get contraceptives from family-planning clinics. Imagine what 16 pregnancies would do to your body.

Clean water. Cholera used to come in epidemics and no one knew for hundreds of years what it was caused by. The biggest modern miracle is probably that of clean water, and modern sanitation. We can drink the water from our taps. It's clean and hygienic and we're not going to get some grim water-borne disease by doing so. Most of our streets aren't filled with sewerage, because we have toilets and water-born sewerage. Pit latrines were cold, draughty and very unhealthy.

Motorised transport. The rush-hour crawl is frustrating, but motorised transport is what makes life possible. No transport, and we'd all have to live within a few kilometres of work. We'd not go on holiday. Too horrible to think about.

Air-conditioning/heating. Log fires look romantic, but are messy, not terribly efficient, and smelly. As recently as 30 years ago, air-conditioning was a rarity. All workers slaved away in hellish temperatures in the summer, cars baked and shops were unbearable. Likewise, in winter, things were also uncomfortable. Before the advent of electricity, there weren't many effective ways of heating up a freezing home.

Electrical household appliances. Think what it would be like to wash all your clothes by hand, having to sweep all the carpets, not having any way to refrigerate food, and having to light a fire when you felt like a cup of coffee. No more reheating of yesterday's leftovers, especially since you couldn't refrigerate them. Your life would be an endless series of household chores and never-ending drudgery. And the house still wouldn't really be clean.

Tampons. Tampons are unobtrusive, easy to use and a lot better than those pads with the loops. Remember them, or are you too young? Tampons are also infinitely preferable to what women used 150 years ago – an absorbent cloth that was washed and re-used. Sounds like a lot of trouble. And pretty grim too.

Telephones, computers and e-mail. The joy of communication. Now you can phone your mother-in-law and tell her you're going to be late. You can keep in daily contact with your brother in Ontario (and see him on Skype) and find out online what you need to know about hotels in Budapest. In Granny's time, letters took months between continents. And no sending text messages or calling a friend just to chat.

- (Susan Erasmus, Health24)

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