I’m interested in hearing about the personal experiences of living in the USSR without making it a political conversation. Rather, just what life was like, the good and the bad, from a nonjudgmental human perspective.

  • anon6789
    link
    287 months ago

    Check out the Ushanka Show YouTube channel. He’s got tons of stories. I’ve really enjoyed the stories of the hassles of trying to have a car and how grocery stores worked, plus all the ways people figured out to “beat the system” of equal distribution. It really gives you the necessary background to start to understand “Soviet engineering” of unique solutions.

      • anon6789
        link
        27 months ago

        I thought that would be exactly what you were looking for. I had always been curious about how things worked as well, and Sergei covers so many topics. I don’t recall any time he seemed to ever think the Soviet way of anything was better than in America, but I feel he presents why the Soviet government thought something would be a good idea, but then how it either didn’t have the intended effect, or how people would manipulate the system and cause issues that way. The way he gives context of the cost of goods to USD is also greatly helpful and he explains what % of your budget different items would be. It’s easy to see how some mundane things could be extremely expensive while a house could be dirt cheap.

        All his stories of his childhood adventures are fun too, like trying to get hold of American fashion to try to impress girls, to some of the chores and responsibilities he would have and how things were different when he was with family in the city vs in the countryside. He’s a little older than I am, and it makes it fun to compare and contrast our childhoods.

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          English
          27 months ago

          Yes, I love that channel! I added so many videos to my watch later list, that I had to stop and just accept hat I will be going through a ton of them. It’s so interesting to me because I almost grew up in the USSR, but a last minute intervention by the US government made it so I grew up in the US instead. I always wondered what it would have been like if that didn’t happen and I lived in the Soviet Union.