This week we reported on the history of the school backpack, and it got a lot of you talking. If you missed the post, check it out here.
It turns out that most backpacks come with a story, and we wanted to hear some of those stories.
We asked for pictures of your first, current or favorite backpack using the hashtag #nprbackpack. Here are some of our favorites:
Some backpacks double as travelogues:
This soft, feather-light Yak Pak backpack has been around the world with me for the past 7 years. She's survived...
Posted by Sheela Cheong on Monday, November 2, 2015
Other backpacks represent personal timelines:
All backpacks seem to represent their owner. Almost like an extension of their personality:
why does npr want to see pictures of our backpacks? oh well. @npr #nprbackpack pic.twitter.com/7ZTLv1ugWN
— alex (@violinwitch) November 2, 2015
And we even got a short lesson on the history of school backpacks in Sweden:
On Facebook some of you tried to one-up my editor Steve Drummond with your own "in my day" experiences:
"No one used backpacks in later years (I'm 68), but in elementary school, when I rode a bike to school, I used an olive drab WWII surplus backpack, from my father, I think. He later told me it was actually the pack a paratrooper wore strapped to his front." - Marion Moïse, on Facebook
"Was recently telling my kids that if a boy liked you, he'd carry your books (I graduated from high school in 1986)!" - Kim Hallemann Crank, on Facebook
"We didn't use backpacks when I went to school. We carried our books on the backs of dinosaurs." - Eileen Noel, on Facebook
And a certain debate emerged in our comment section about whether you were a "one-strapper" or "two-strapper":
"Do you wear it over both shoulders or just swing it over one?" - Thorfinn Skullsplitter, NPR.org
"I graduated HS in 1979, and used a backpack from middle school on. We would NEVER have put it on our backs - the cool way to wear it was slung over one shoulder. The only exception was while you were riding your bike, as long as said bike was a fancy 10-speed with the 'ram's horns' handlebars." - mayya, NPR.org
"I think the two-strap thing came about because more weight was being carried in backpacks, too much to be comfortably carried on one shoulder." - Joseph, NPR.org
"Oh, the contemptible double-loopers." - Denise Powers, NPR.org
It turns out that Slate even wrote an article about the one-strap/two-strap phenomenon. Check it out here.
What inspired the article? A scene from the movie 21 Jump Street, which is definitely worth a look:
So, which one are you? One-strap or two?
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