T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
72.1 | Skool days | PEKING::SNOOKL | | Thu May 20 1993 09:05 | 8 |
| I could definitley cope with being back at primary school.
The really good thing is you don;t have any worries unless you had an
awful form tutor and you hadn't done your homework!
I am an assistant cub leader and all the lads seem so carefree and
enjoy themselves easily. Still that doesn't mean at all that adults
dont have a right to revert to childhood and act like that for a bit.
|
72.2 | Nah | SALEM::KUPTON | Red Sox - More My Age | Thu May 20 1993 09:21 | 16 |
| The pressure on kids today is rough. My son is sorta an outsider
because he doesn't care for sports. He's a sensitive, caring, curious
10 year old. He likes paying basketball but has no interest in other
sports and sometimes he goes for days without male friends. I will say
that he's popular as all get out with the girls. More than a few times
he's been the only boy at a birthday party so there may more to not
being a jock than meets the eye.
I know he worries alot more about the world he lives in than I did
when I was 10. He's concerned about the rainforest, animals becoming
extinct and the environment.
I don't think I'd want to be 10 again. Knowing what I know now and
being 10 would be worse because I'd have less power to make changes and
that would be frustrating as hell.
I would like to be 20 again tho.......
K
|
72.3 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu May 20 1993 09:52 | 7 |
| I will concure to the 20 again vs 10. Seems like there are too many
things of life that are missed because your not old enough to
understand and your always dreaming of being 20, have a fine job, and a
fine or fast car.
Remembering 10 is like remembering being a member of a missing link, or
a escape of the pra-mode-ial (sp) swamps.:)
|
72.4 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu May 20 1993 10:28 | 19 |
| No, I would not want to go back to being 10 yrs. old again for
anything. I think being an adult is a lot more fun than being a kid.
As a kid, you're at the mercy of your parents lifestyle, and at the
mercy of your teachers (petty tyrants) at school. The bottom line is I
would never want to go back to having no money, no car, no sex (!), and
not being able to decide how late I will stay up at night and what I
will or will not eat, and what I will or will not watch on TV. Can you
imagine not being able to walk into a bar and order a drink? Good
lord. When it comes right down to it, children have very few rights.
When I was a kid, I couldn't wait to grow-up, so I could at least
attempt to do what I wanted!
I'd like to spend about 50 yrs. being 21 again. though! That would be
worth re-living....again and again and again.
Lorna
|
72.5 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Thu May 20 1993 10:54 | 7 |
| My mother died the year I was ten. I wouldn't do that year over
again for anything.
20? Now that was a good year but the best was 22. The year I courted
my wife.
Alfred
|
72.6 | Now any time! | MR4DEC::MAHONEY | | Thu May 20 1993 11:56 | 8 |
| Not for me... at that age I had pretty little going on for me. Could
not go out, could not stay up late, could not travel... I didn't know
what love was, and had no children or husband. (I cannot imagine my
life, today, without all that). My best years??? from 18 up to now!
the worst year??? last year, (I lost my sister...)
Ana
|
72.7 | 5th grade funnies | BLASTA::Pelkey | | Thu May 20 1993 12:36 | 77 |
| Funny Story time...
When I was in fifth grade, (11 or 12..) I used to sit in the second
seat from the front of the second row.... One of myh buds ("Danny"),
sat towards the back of the first row.... We used to wing spit balls at
each all the time, (used the casing of Bic pens) and for some
unsolved mystery, we never got bagged.. We had a teach, (Mrs. Mclean)
from Jamacia, and I think she was just too cool to let us know
she was onto us...
Well, on morning, I take two direct hits in the back of the head during
Math. (Obviously Danny had been practicing his shot) Well the "Code"
thing was, fire back, but sitting in the second seat, of the second
row, I was a little exposed.... But not to be out-done, I packed a
missle into my Bic Pen case,,, "Danny" was etched on the front, oh,
I was gonna nail him...
So loaded for bear, and ready to fire, I wait for just the right second
when Mrs. Mclean was distracted... Fiannly, my window of oppurtunity;
while the teacher chalks and example on the board, in one fluent move
I turn, raise my weapon, place it to my lips, aim,,, and blow "Uhhh"....
... damn, it's stuck!.... (Danny's nearly wetting himself at this
point...)
So I nonchalantly turn around, and within three seconds, 'whack...'
hit number three arrives at the back of my head...
"ooooooooo I'll KILL him!!!"
but ofcourse, I'm still jammed ,,, So, again, quite nonchalantly I try
to unjam my tube.... (and this is where innocence is sometimes bliss,
and usually stupid...) While facing the front of the room, I
innocently put the tube back to my lips, and start pusing all
the air I'm worth into the pen casing,,,,,,,, after about 10 seconds
of looking like a blow fish, "Phoooom" out comes the spit ball, screaming
through the air, like a harm missle........
(and I'm not making this up..) it hits Mrs MClean sqaure in the forearm!
Well, naturally, she sees the spit ball, and of course want's a name..
Trying to look innocent can work sometimes, but not when Jeanne Weafer
sits next to you..... "HE DID IT!" while pointing an accusing finger
at me... ("Oh-o... this one's gonna hurt..").
Well, to make a long story short, I admited to the crime...
(all I wanted at this point was to take my medicine like a man....)
Now the usual punishment, was public ridicule.. And since Mrs. Mclean
didn't have a dunce cap and stool she used the next best thing...
The Waste basket..
So, up I go, and take my place, sitting in the waste basket.. If you
can picture a 11 year old kid, with his but inside a waste baskte, with
my legs and body sticking out, I guess it can be a pretty funny picture.
And to be sure, the class is in hysterics, (especially Danny, who will
soon be needing oxygen...)
I'm thinking, o.k. this isn't bad, a few laughs, and I'm back in my
seat.... WRONG.... See I had forgot abount something..
Now put your self in my place, and ask yourself:
what's the worse thing that could have possibly happened at this point ???
My Mother, (who spend a few days a week working at the school cafe)
knocks on the door, and walks into the room...!
I don't know what reason she gave for doing this, but I know what
ever it was, it was a lie...... But I'll never-ever forget the look on
face...
needless to say, I had some high explaining to do later that day...
|
72.8 | | ZEKE::QUAYLE | | Thu May 20 1993 12:41 | 21 |
| I wouldn't go back a day, or a year. (Of course, as a product of my
culture, I wouldn't mind *looking* 25-35 ;)
Really enjoyed childhood, endured adolescence, and have found adulthood
so far to demand a mixture of endurance and joy. Some past events were
absolutely wonderful - early years of marriage, having babies (OK, some
endurance called for there), rearing children (OK, *lots* of
endurance). Adult experiences include seeking God, defining goals,
developing philosophy, friendships (!), learning, learning, learning,
grieving (one of my children was born with a sever birth defect),
learning, trusting, hoping, suffering cancer, recovering, suffering
depression, recovering, taking and giving...
All this has led not only to knowledge and experience, but some wisdom.
It's the wisdom I wouldn't be willing to lose. In fact, I wouldn't
give up wrinkles, gray hair, fat, the decrepitness (decrepicy?)
(decrepitude?) of age if it meant the loss of one iota of experience
and wisdom. Easy for me to say; there's not way to make the choice -
life appears to be one-way... :)
aq
|
72.9 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Thu May 20 1993 12:58 | 5 |
| Go back to an age from which I'd have to live through Viet Nam again,
and risk getting called up and shipped over there as cannon fodder?
Not on your life - or, more accurately, mine. No, I didn't go, and
knowing what I know today I will eternally be grateful that I escaped
that particular folly of my not-so-wise government leaders.
|
72.10 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Thu May 20 1993 14:55 | 7 |
|
I despised ages 11-18.
I would never go back there.
Ages 5-7 and 9-10 were cool, though.
-Jody
|
72.11 | 13 | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu May 20 1993 15:30 | 10 |
| I think alot of you are forgetting that to be 10 again would mean
being TEN again. That means you would not be a 10 year old adult.
i.e. an adult mind trapped in a 10 year old body. By being 10 again
you would have the knowledge and perspective on the World of a 10 year
old which means you wouldn't miss being 21 because you had never BEEN
21.
I think I would rather be about 13 again, (AH the joys of puberty).
Jeff
|
72.12 | not really | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Thu May 20 1993 15:57 | 14 |
| re .11, when I was a kid I wanted to be a grown-up, though. Even
though I hadn't been one yet, I was able to tell from movies, tv, books
and life that most grown-ups appeared to have far more freedoms than I
had as a child. Also, I absolutely detested grade-school. I could not
even begin to find the words to describe how much I hated grade school.
Plus, I hated being expected to act like a kid.
When I was 10 yrs. old I wanted to be able to wear make-up and
high-heels and grown-up clothes and go out on dates and drive a car,
etc., etc, and I couldn't because I was a little kid. It was
frustrating.
Lorna
|
72.13 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Thu May 20 1993 17:32 | 8 |
|
Hi Jody. What happened at age 8 ??
/Eric
|
72.14 | For ever onward --> | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it... | Fri May 21 1993 06:07 | 22 |
|
What's this about all the freedoms one has as an Adult.
You're still a slave to a system (The state instead of your folks)!
When I was ten I saw most of Europe for free. Every Hotel we stayed in
had a pool, and loads of kids to hang out with. I went to
Disney Land and never put my hand in my pocket ( Last time I went
I nearly had to declare myself bankrupt) :-). I had no worries about
morgage, state of the world, career, sex, appearance etc... I just
lived every day as it came. Now I can't do anything without worries
about how I'm going to pay for it. Before my folks did all of this for
me.
12 to 20 was a bitch and there is no way on this earth that I would want
to be a Teenager again. All that hormonal displace going on, not for
me thank you.
But then you see I'm only 23 anyway, so I haven't even lived half a life
yet. Maybe the best is yet to come (well lets hope so anyway).
Peter
|
72.15 | | BLASTA::Pelkey | | Fri May 21 1993 09:42 | 10 |
| re: 14
You may find that you actually like your 30's..
I'm having a blast, and still have four years left...
Rumor has it, some say... 40's are even better.....
Hmmm.... I don't know, no choice but to wait I guess...
|
72.16 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Fri May 21 1993 09:48 | 8 |
|
I moved to a different state in the middle of a school semester.
Lost all my friends, was rejected a lot, felt like a martian.
you know, the usual.
-Jody
|
72.17 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri May 21 1993 10:44 | 10 |
|
Thanks Jody. Yeah, rejected alot and feeling like a martian. That happened
to me even without moving to another state. Those grades 6 - 10 were really
bad for me...
/Eric
|
72.18 | memories | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Fri May 21 1993 11:49 | 20 |
| Fifth grade was when we read Homer's Odyssey in school. I still
remember those wonderful books with the illustrations in purple ink. I
loved reading that book.
It was fifth (or sixth?) when my teacher demonstrated making nylon.
She mixed two substances and voila - made a large glop. My pal Rosalyn
said, "You mean my Mama puts that on HER legs?!?"
In one of those grades we had our first boy-girl party at the room over
the garage at Geoffrey Lardiere's. The boys went wild and started
tearing down the decorations. Several parental interventions were
needed. I remember sitting on a sofa with several other girls, feeling
very uncomfortable and self-conscious in my nylons and garter belt.
Eventually we did dance, both fast and slow. Wooo.
10 years old was not bad, though my hormones started running and I got
very confused.
Laura
|
72.19 | i like being grown-up | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Fri May 21 1993 11:53 | 59 |
| re .14, of course, adults are not *completely.* We have to follow the
laws of the land, and most of us have to work for a living, and we can
only buy what we can afford. However, compared to children I still
think adults have much more freedom. At least now I can stay up as
late as I want, watch whatever I want on TV, see whatever movies I
want, eat or not eat whatever I want, swear if I feel like it -
expressly forbidden in my family! :-) - drink if I want, have pets
without getting my parents permission, go where I want to go on
vacation if I can afford it, decide how I will spend my disposable
income instead of having my parents dictate it.
Also, I am amazed when you say you had no worries as a child. I
actually had more worries as a child than I have as a 43 yr. old woman.
I feel much more in control of things now than I did then. As a child
it seemed that people were always trying to make me do things I was
afraid to do. I was painfully shy and used to dread having to answer
questions in the classroom. I had difficulty making friends, and went
through all sorts of trouble trying to find kids to play with at recess
so I wouldn't get picked on as an outsider. Sometimes I succeeded and
sometimes I didn't. I died a thousand deaths everytime I had to give
an oral report in class. I was so petrified it's amazing I never
killed myself or ran away to get out of it. I hated gym class and went
through all sorts of trouble trying to get out of it, so I wouldn't be
picked on and humiliated for not being athletic. I was always the
littlest kid in my class - 1st grade through senior year, and so
bullies were always trying to push me around, and I was always having
to try to eithe avoid them or stand-up for myself.
On another note, as a child during the cold war, sometimes I couldn't
sleep at night for fear that nuclear bombs would be dropped on us in
the night. I, also, worried excessively over house fires, and of
coming down with leukemia (which still always killed kids back in the
'50's and early '60's). I was afraid my parents would die and I'd be
an orphan. I don't think I slept during the Cuban Missle Crises, I was
so afraid we'd all end up dead in a nuclear war. *sigh*
Suffice it to say, that, as a little kid, I was an emotional wreck, and
have calmed down *considerably*!! :-)
Also, you say that you traveled all over the place for free as a kid.
You were fortunate. My parents didn't have much money and the only
place we ever went was camping on the Maine Coast for 2 weeks every
summer. Other than that, we stayed home all the time, and we lived way
out in the country and there were hardly any other kids to play with.
On reflection, I think I spent most of my childhood either drawing
pictures, reading novels or wandering around the woods alone. I
grew-up 45 miles from Boston, and never even went there til I was 16
yrs. old. My parents didn't like the city. They just liked to stay
home and work in the garden and sit in the yard and read the newspaper.
It was boring. There were some good times, and my folks were nice.
But....I like to go places. I like to go shopping, go movies, rock
concerts, out to eat, to the beach, to antique shows, to museums. Now,
that I'm an adult I can do those things. As a kid I couldn't.
So, maybe your individual childhood was wonderful, but not everyone's
is. I have had much more fun as an adult than I ever did as a kid!!!!
Lorna
|
72.20 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Fri May 21 1993 15:54 | 13 |
| Lorna, thanks for sharing about the fear of nuclear war. I remember that.
Yes, back in 60's I used to worry about nuclear war too. I think during Cuban
missle crisis I was crying in bed one morning, and my mother just said "Stop it,
there's not going to be an atomic war". I was born in '52 (I'm 41 now), so
I must have been about 10. I no longer worry much about nuclear war any more,
but I still have some fear of death, not imminent death but mere the guaranteed
eventuality of it. Meditation and 12-step meetings have helped alleviate this
somewhat though.
/Eric
|
72.21 | gives me the shivers | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Fri May 21 1993 17:12 | 9 |
| In '61 or '62 I wrote a school essay about "What I Would Do in a
Nuclear War." I said I'd rather be one of the first dead. Quite a
revolutionary notion in those days of air-raid shelters. I remember
the shelters sold by the swimming pool dealers along Route 22 in New
Jersey. A very eerie time, and I sensed we weren't getting the full
story. I was right.
Laura
|
72.22 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Fri May 21 1993 17:21 | 2 |
| Our standing macabre joke back then was that you'd be lucky if you could
say afterward, "What was that?" Then we learned about nuclear winter.
|
72.23 | remember this one? | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Back in the high life again | Fri May 21 1993 19:15 | 10 |
| I loved that schoolyard joke:
If the sirens sound, get under your desk, bend your head to your knees,
and kiss your #*&*( goodbye!
Kids do manage to cut through the bull.
:-)
Laura
|
72.24 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Mon May 24 1993 10:23 | 3 |
| Re .23
Yes, I remember that one. The official phrase was "Duck and cover."
|
72.25 | Not free | SALEM::GILMAN | | Mon May 24 1993 12:59 | 34 |
| I can relate to allot of what you say Lorna (in .19). Speaking in
front of the class was a terrifying experience for me too. I too
would do almost anything to get out of it. Being 'sick' only worked
for a day or two, then you had to do your speech virtually solo when
you got back. You could only be 'sick' so long and the teacher always
remembered you hadn't done yours yet. Grade school for me was
relatively easy compared to High School. High School was a nighmare
of school pressure, peer pressure, parental pressure, and yes, the
worry that I would get nuked at anytime. I still don't really believe
the nuke threat is over. (There are terrorists crazy enough to let New
York have it if they could get the bomb, and its only a matter of time
(and money) before they do). (I am still amazed we have made it as
long as we have without Nuke WW III). At ten I was just beginning to
'wake up' and see reality for what it really is. My childhood fantasy
world was beginning to crumble.
I absolutely HATED being made to eat food that was gross at school and
camp.
I think we tend to forget as adults how tough some of the times of our
childhoods really were. I can't say things are any easier as an adult
either.... DIFFERENT things are tough now. Of course there are some
stable problems which never go away no matter how old we are... the
fear of death for one. Back then I thought I could beat the 'system'
(avoid death somehow). Now I no longer have the luxury of believing
that.
The PRICE for the relative freedom we have as adults is the loss of
innocence and being accountable for everything we do.
Lorna, getting to stay up as late as you want has its price... (see the
line above).
Jeff
|
72.26 | 18 + Life. | PEKING::SNOOKL | | Wed Jun 02 1993 09:16 | 3 |
| I don't know about being 10 again, but I shall stay 18 as long as
poss.
|
72.27 | it wasn't really a surprise | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | wandering spirit | Wed Jun 02 1993 11:33 | 5 |
| re .26, usually it's around 12 months, which my daughter found out in
Feb. when she turned 19.
Lorna
|
72.28 | Size 10 ? | ESSB::PHAYDEN | It's not how long it takes but how well you do it... | Thu Jun 03 1993 05:26 | 5 |
|
Maybe this could be entered in the Wommannotes Conference as "Would you
like to be a size 10 again ?" :-)
Peter.
|
72.29 | so there! :-) | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | wandering spirit | Thu Jun 03 1993 10:40 | 7 |
| re .28, well, I, for one, would have trouble relating to it, since the
largest size I've ever taken is a size 3.
Lorna (petite feminist)
|
72.30 | Growing up is unacceptable. | STRATA::WILCOX | | Wed Feb 15 1995 06:45 | 20 |
| I would love to be ten years old if I was born in 1940. Ten today,
no thank you. I turned 10 in `81, the beginning of a lousy decade.
Lousy music, lousy role models, and the beginning of the "I'm not
responsible for my actions, or present situation, therefore I'll blame
it all on something that was or is out of my control."
This pathetic view of life that many people seem to be taking may
make them feel good while talking to other saps in their "therapy
group", but when all the handouts and pity has passed, life goes on and
surprise, it's not that bad.
Get up off the ground, wipe the dirt and blood off your knees, pick
up your bike, wipe the tears and ride home. It's that easy.
The more I experience, the more I learn and realize that in most
instances a child's perspective keeps everthing basic and simple.
In many ways I am still ten years old, I may grow old but, I'll
never grow up.
Peter
|