The events of the day take me back in my mind to the innocence of my own childhood. I grew up in small towns of a few thousand residents. It was a time when parents could never have imagined that there might come a day when their grandchildren and great-grandchildren wouldn't be safe sitting in a classroom or playing in their front yards. When mass shootings would be commonplace, and kids would carry knives and guns in their backpacks. In the late 1960s and early '70s, while I was growing up, children played outside until dark and nobody gave a second thought to allowing their kids to walk to their friends' homes or to school.
Our room was the one on the far right of the second floor |
We had a spooky dreary basement with a big old wood cook stove a past resident had left against the wall, a coal shoot we no longer used in a creepy dark corner, a wooden corral beneath the clothes shoot where we would drop things from the little trapdoors in the wall of the first and second floors into the dirty clothes. There was the earthy-smelling cool root cellar filled with potatoes, tomatoes, onions and jar upon jar of canned goods my mother had put up every year from her backyard garden. At one end of the basement, stood a ringer washtub and a large cast iron wash sink where Mom would wash clothes for her family of seven, and one corner had a shower curtain strung across, concealing a shower head and a commode sat beside it out in the open, so we never had to leave our wonderland when nature called. We played for hours down there. I'll never forget the day we had a fight and I ran up the stairs, flipped off the light, and held the door shut while my little sister screamed and pounded on the other side, and my mother's stern face and warning that something like that could make her go crazy for the rest of her life. She was mad as a wet hen when she got out, but she was fine, although I still feel the sting of that scolding.
We were pretty good kids, although we found enough mischief to make life interesting. There were no computers or cell phones, and television was reserved for Saturday morning cartoons and evening family shows like The Waltons and Grizzly Adams, Little House on the Prairie and Apple's Way. I remember our 8 PM evening "treat" before bed, which was often a glass of soda pop. That makes me chuckle now as I down a whole 12-pack of Mt Dew by myself per day, and it's never tasted as good as that rare glass of Root Beer.
Children in my day made their own entertainment. Old school papers, with their mimeographed purple ink bleeding through the back, kept my sister busy while I supervised her "tests" in our bedroom schoolhouse. Our handmade sandbox with wads of grass poking up through the building-grade sand was a popular spot for the neighbor kids. The front porch was a hang-out for pre-pubescent teenager wannabes. I still remember coming home from school and dragging my sister out to the overturned rowboat in the yard to show her how I'd learned to dissect an earthworm. It was so cool!
Me & my sister, with the infamous Christmas doll, in 1975 |
Me as Santa for a 1974 school Christmas party |
I pray for comfort and healing for the families and friends of the victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting on December 14. 2012. Bless the memory of the lost.
Joyce what a beautiful post.
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