T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
452.1 | | CIPHER::VERGE | | Fri Aug 21 1987 10:25 | 10 |
| -{I Survived Growing Up Catholic}-
I spent some time (3-4 years) in Brooklyn living with an aunt and
uncle after my mother died. I was 4-5-6-7 years old - and I went
to Catholic School (this thought should evoke memories in a few
folks out there). I used to watch all the people go to Sunday Services
in the (gasp!) Episcopal Church across the street. Since I
had been taught that everyone that was not a Catholic, that went
to another church would not be saved and died, I never could figure out
how they all managed to come back out every week.
|
452.2 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Fri Aug 21 1987 11:18 | 14 |
| When I was, hmmm, around 5 I'd guess, my older cousin Karen fetched
me with her to high school one day. I went round with her to all her
classes, tried hard to learn something in each one, and generally
provided a lot of innocent amusement to Karen's teachers and
classmates. I remember her spanish class was doing adjective/ noun
drill, and I'll not ever til my dying day forget two of the examples
used (though in fact I may be garbling the spelling or grammatical
details): "bueno muchacho" and "mala muchacha". I can clearly
remember feeling sad, but resigned, that the language didn't also
include "buena muchacha" and "malo muchacho".
(Have *I* ever come a long way, baby! :-)
=maggie
|
452.3 | woof vx meow | DECSIM::HALL | | Fri Aug 21 1987 11:41 | 4 |
| Doesn't *everybody* grow up thinking that dogs are 'boys'
and cats are 'girls'??
Dale
|
452.4 | Crossed Eyes | NEWPRT::NEWELL | Aug.31st, the beginning of the end | Fri Aug 21 1987 12:20 | 24 |
| When I was about 8 I took great pleasure in making crazy faces which
generally included crossing my eyes. Then one day my mother warned
me that if I did it too often my eyes might get stuck and I would
forever be cross-eyed.
Every night after that (for about a year) I lived in fear that I
would inadvertenly cross my eyes just as I dozed off to sleep and
was certain I would wake up one morning with my eyes hopelessly
crossed.
I had a ritual every night: I would look up at the ceiling and make
sure my eyes were *perfectly* straight, then I would close them
*very* slowly, opening them every so often just to make sure I hadn't
let my eyes move out of position.
Most nights it took me close to an hour to get to sleep!
I was always relieved in the morning when I'd wake up to find that I
had done such a good job keeping my eyes straight. :^)
Jodi-
|
452.5 | From a time long long ago ... | LAIDBK::RESKE | Preserved For Future Use ... | Fri Aug 21 1987 12:35 | 36 |
|
re: .1 ... Speaking of going to Catholic shool (I went for 12 years)
I spent the first 5 or 6 years of school knowing for sure that nuns
wore long dresses because they didn't have any legs. Since they
were so close to God they just floated around.
When I went to mass as a child, I used to think God lived in that
"funny gold house" that sat up on the alter. When the priest went
and opened the door to get the communion waffers, God handed them
to him.
As a child I always thought that mom and dad were always "old".
We just humored them by asking questions about their childhood.
I figured that even if they were children, they still looked
the same ... old.
For years and years it seems, I really thought God and the angels
were "upstairs bowling" every time it thundered. It's funny
now when I remember how I used to picture it!
I remember a conversation I had with my 6 year old neice and newphew
(they're 27 days apart in age) about babies when my sister was
pregnant. They knew the baby was in mommy's tummy but when I asked
them how it got there, they both replied that daddy put it there
(mom obviously had nothing to say about it). I then asked then
how he put it there and after some discussion between themselves,
they decided that he made mommy swallow it. They thought that
maybe he put it in a cheeseburger or something. Interesting ....
I hope these are helpful
Donna
|
452.6 | Just to Clarify .... | LAIDBK::RESKE | Preserved For Future Use ... | Fri Aug 21 1987 12:44 | 11 |
|
After re-reading my last note I just wanted to state that my
sister did not have a baby in 27 days. My neice belongs to my
brother and my newphew is my sister's (and brother-in-law's)
handy work. They like to coordinate the birth of their children.
I didn't want to play that game! :-)
Donna
|
452.7 | What color are they? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Fri Aug 21 1987 12:54 | 12 |
| Wen I was about 3, someone used the term 'colored people' around
me. I told my grandmother that I would like to see some colored
people. She took me to a more racially mixed area than we lived
in, and said that there would be 'colored people' there. I looked,
and asked here where they were. I didn't see any colored people,
they were all brown. I was expecting blues, green, orange, etc.
I think that 'black' is a better term. Certainly less confusing
than 'colored'.
Elizabeth
|
452.8 | Hearing the silence of Taboo | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri Aug 21 1987 13:03 | 9 |
| Ah, yes, when I was young. I always worried when we visited new
(to me) people, or old friends in new houses, that they wouldn't
have toilets. Since NOONE EVER talked about them, I assumed that
not everyone needed them.
My grandfather told me that it was monkeys playing that made the
swells in the river as we motored down and up.
Ann B.
|
452.9 | ARMY and NAVY were just practicing for real wars, I guess... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Fri Aug 21 1987 13:23 | 21 |
| When I was a kid, I used to hear news stories about how "ARMY
BEATS NAVY" and other news about the results of the battles between
various Armed Forces.
I used to wonder why our own military forces spent so much time
fighting each other. Didn't it make more sense to wait til there
was a war and go to fight the military forces of some other
country??? :-)
Also, I used to think that if I was still in the tub when all
the water went out, I'd go down the drain.
The earliest memory of my whole life was walking into my parent's
room looking for a beach ball that had rolled in there. My
Dad showed me a forced round belly (a trick he knew how to do)
and made a sound like a beach ball on it. He told me that he
had eaten my beach ball. I just walked away (thinking that
I had better keep my doll carriage the heck AWAY from Dad --
that he would eat anything.) :-)
Suzanne... :-)
|
452.10 | | DSSDEV::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Fri Aug 21 1987 13:47 | 11 |
| When I got my first package of M&M's my great aunt took me out
to the garden to plant them, since she thought I was too young
for candy. Funny, they never grew.
On "colored" people: A favorite quote of my mother's was when I
was very young and saw a black man drive by in a truck (we lived
in an area with no blacks at all) and called out "Mother! Look
at the golden man!" in that piercing voice young children have.
I suspect I'd have been very confused to be told he was black.
JimB.
|
452.11 | The original War Memorial Stadium... | BCSE::RYAN | Equal Opportunity Noter | Fri Aug 21 1987 13:48 | 19 |
| Growing up in the Sixties, I remember seeing war in Vietnam
all the time in the media. I thought that whenever two nations
were mad at each other, they'd send their armies over to
Vietnam to fight it out (sort of like the Super Bowl). After
all, no one would be dumb enough to fight a war where people
actually lived, right? (no, I didn't realize people lived in
Vietnam).
And back to the good ol' "where do babies come from?", my
Catholic parish had what they called "sex education" classes.
They said the daddy gives a seed to the mommy, and it combines
with her egg and grows into a baby. They left out how he gives
her the seed, though... I thought that when they kissed he
would cough it up or something like that and she would swallow
it. (Yuck!)
By the way, what does this topic have to do with WOMANNOTES?
Mike
|
452.12 | | NAAD::PALMASON | | Fri Aug 21 1987 15:18 | 10 |
| Another bathroom "scare"...
My family used to visit my two great aunts every so often. Their
toilet was high up on a large bench, with a pull cord for flushing.
I used to think I was going to be sucked down the drain whenever
I pulled that cord. By the way, years later I revealed this secret
to my cousin and learned that she had felt the same way!
These stories are great!
|
452.13 | Kids say the darndest things?? | PNEUMA::SULLIVAN | | Fri Aug 21 1987 15:55 | 11 |
|
When I was about 8 or 9, my mother told me about menstruation, and
she told me that women used Kotex pads. A few weeks later, I heard
some of my friends talking about tampons. When I asked my mother
what the difference was, she told me that young (single) women used
Kotex, and that married women used tampons. Later that week, I was
at a friend's house, and I saw a box of Kotex in the bathroom. I ran
home and told my mother that Mr. and Mrs. Kavanagh weren't really
married.
Justine
|
452.16 | Did they have have a Union??? | HARRY::HIGGINS | Citizen of Atlantis | Fri Aug 21 1987 16:55 | 11 |
|
While veiwing movies at the Saturday Matinee as a child, I assummed
that people that died in the movies really died.
I also figured out that the producers of the movie recruited those
that were to die in the film from prison (death row) offering an
exciting, glorious, celluloid death as opposed to the electric chair.
I'm smarter now.
|
452.17 | two of my misconceptions | IMAGIN::ALVEY | | Fri Aug 21 1987 16:58 | 16 |
|
Until fairly recently, I wouldn't go fishing because I thought
that if you caught a fish, the fish's family would be left without
anyone to feed them. (I'm talking about fish like trout.) My husband
told me that fish are not family-oriented and explained that fish
"relationships" are of the one-night stand variety.
My Aunt has a large photo of my grandparents when they were quite old.
The picture is black and white and sort of has a cloud around them
and grandma has a corsage on, grandpa has a buttoniere (sp?). All
the time I was little I thought that was a picture of my grandparents
in heaven (because of the cloud) AND that all people who went to
heaven got to wear flowers!
Anna
|
452.18 | dogs are people too???? | IMAGIN::ALVEY | | Fri Aug 21 1987 17:14 | 13 |
|
One of the first few replies mentioned that often people think of
dogs as boys and cats as girls. I can add to that -- I had a York-
shir terrier when I was little. He never had the opportunity for
any canine romance and my parents didn't have him neutered. He
would frequently try to mate with pillows, bunched-up rugs, piles
of dirty laundry and any new house-guest's arm (he rested his head
on their shoulder and looked longingly into their eyes). Once,
when he was mating with the dirty laundry, I asked my mom what he
was doing ( I was about 6 or 7) and my mom's response was "MEN!"
in a really disgusted tone! For a few years, you can imagine what
I thought men (human ones) did in private. I thought my dog just didn't
have the good taste to do it privately.
|
452.19 | Yep, me too | MEMV02::BULLOCK | | Fri Aug 21 1987 17:23 | 23 |
| This note is the greatest--! (and yes, I always did think of dogs
as "boys", and cats as "girls"--aren't they??:-))
I was 4 or 5, and my folks and I were driving by a resort area.
There were a bunch of those little "efficiency" cottages by the
side of the road that caught my eye. I said to my parents,
"Those houses are too small to be doghouses; they must be CATHOUSES!"
My dad nearly drove us off the road..
My grandmother used to read to me before bed whenever I stayed
overnight there. She was Irish-Welsh, and liked the old legends
a lot, so many of the stories she read were about the little people,
ghosts, leprachauns, and of course, The Banshee. Well, I had only
just started reading (about age 6), and had come across the word
"bantam rooster". So I got confused between the two and thought
that the Banshee was some kind of Irish-phantom chicken that screamed
behind doors at night..so whenever I stayed over, I always checked
that bedroom door!!
I'm glad I'm not the only one who grew up this way!
Jane
|
452.20 | live and learn | ULTRA::TURAJ | | Fri Aug 21 1987 17:38 | 16 |
|
i thought the pimento grew in the olive. (i'm embarrassed to tell
you how old i was when i learned otherwise.)
also, when i was just making out the details of what sex was about,
i saw one of those steamy tv shows where the couple kisses
passionately and goes into the bedroom right before the commercial.
well, i knew they were gonna make a baby, but wasn't sure of the
details. so i asked my mom, with a fair amount of disgust, "but
do they *have* to take their *clothes* off???"
now i like it better that way.
;)
jenny
|
452.21 | Huh? | DINER::SHUBIN | 'The aliens came in business suits' | Fri Aug 21 1987 17:42 | 9 |
|
This one's a little different -- it's a misunderstanding of something
that my dad used to say. He'd go to the store, come home and say that
he'd gotten a good price on something: "It cost thirty-two dollars and
change". I always heard that as "...thirty-two dollars IN change". I
never understood why they gave better prices for paying with quarters,
nickels and dimes...
|
452.22 | terrifying! | LEZAH::BOBBITT | face piles of trials with smiles | Fri Aug 21 1987 18:03 | 9 |
| Every time I went to a department store I was DAMN sure to step
OVER the crack in the escalator when getting off - I mean I could
picture it grabbing and devouring my shoes - my legs - the rest
of me....and nothing would be left but Jody-spaghetti for the next
patrons to step on.
-Jody
|
452.23 | two more | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Aug 21 1987 21:40 | 7 |
| My father always used to refer to something as a "mere bag of
shells". I remember how surprised I was when I took French to
discover that they had a phrase so similar (a mere bagatelle).
and I was in my teens before it dawned on me that black people were
black all over, not just where it showed.
Bonnie
|
452.24 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Fri Aug 21 1987 22:28 | 20 |
| Wonderful Peeps!!! Keep it up! Please!!!
The last note reminded me of an epiphany (the euraka moment) that I
witnessed ~ 1965.
A new girlfriend, who lived on the white side of town, picked me up at
my house, on the integrated side of town, to drive me to school. Driving
away from my house, she saw a ten year old black boy walking his dog.
She was awed. "I didn't know black people had dogs!"
-----
I'd also like to hear about conceptual imagery. For instance, did
you have an image of your soul? Here are some I know about:
My soul looked like a Catholic communion wafer, perfectly round and white.
An old acquaintance saw his soul as soft white and shaped like a dog's
cookie bone.
A friend of a friend thought her freckles were sins showing up on her face.
|
452.26 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Sat Aug 22 1987 01:00 | 12 |
| The writer sent this to me via with permission to post. Please feel free
to mail me any misconceptions you don't want to post. Meigs
When I was 16, the topic in my high school Biology class was
reproduction. That was the first time any adult actually came
out and said to me that penises enter vaginas. I thought the
teacher was lying. I had tried to use tampons, without success.
I figured if I couldn't get a tampon in there, no way a
penis would fit. Therefore, he must be lying. I could never
figure out why he would lie about it.
|
452.27 | Is That A Gun In Your Pocket, Or... | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Sat Aug 22 1987 01:13 | 22 |
|
I was scientific about reproduction at age 5. The givens were these:
The man places a seed in the woman and the baby grows inside a place
like the tummy. The penis has something to do with it because dad said
so once. Mom told me our navels are where we started to grow. Then
there were those "maternity outfits" for when you have the baby...
Environmental effects: Cowboy shows on TV and my dad, who had been
raised a farmer & planted garden each year.
Conclusion: The seed is hard like corn and is fired from the penis
into the mom's navel, but instead of being shot she grows a baby.
You don't see the "bullet hole" made by the seed because it's done
wearing maternity clothes. The other maternity clothes are for when
you're big.
BTW: Breasts had nothing to do with it, & for some g_d reason anytime
you touched them folks whooped. Babys are supposed to eat there but I
don't belive my sisters because they said _I_ did too & they saw...
|
452.28 | just a few... | USAT02::CARLSON | Heavens to Mergatroid! | Sat Aug 22 1987 17:49 | 15 |
| I've really enjoyed reading these...
- My Mom always told us to be careful NOT to swallow seeds, or
we'd have an orange/cherry/whatever tree growing in our stomachs.
- Would always dodge the cracks on the sidewalks - "Step on a crack,
break your Mother's back"
- used to say extra prayers every night so I could fall asleep on
Christmas Eve... (never worked)
- believed the goons on Popeye were out to get me.
Theresa.
|
452.29 | | FOCUS2::BACOT | | Sat Aug 22 1987 20:15 | 6 |
| Even though my grandparents were Irish/American, when my mother
was very young, she was convinced that she was Chinese! Seems that
someone told her that every fifth child born in the world was Chinese
and since she was the youngest of five children...
|
452.30 | Me and the girls... | PIWACT::KLEINBERGER | MAXCIMize your efforts | Sat Aug 22 1987 22:54 | 27 |
| Being a preachers' kid.... I really believed my dad when he told
me that thunder storms were God and the angels playing bowling...
I just couldn't figure out why they played at night when they were
"supposed" to be sleeping...
Its cute reading this... my kids all went through the phase of
"stepping on a crack, and 'breaking' my back...
I think the hardest one that I had had to deal with, was letting
all my girls watch a PBS documentary on childbirth and conception
(figured they could probably do a better job at explaining then
I have done)... well, the show was done extremely well, including
using red dye (to show semen) to show what happens during sex....
Afterwards, my twelve year old came to me (about 3 hours later), and
wanted to know if men could use tampons too... It was quite a shock to
find out that she thought the red dye was men having periods!... Eeeeks,
did I have some explaining to do (and I have to keep from giggling
the whole time)...
I think the other misconception (mistake????)... is:
I still don't think my parents ever have sex... I mean, they're
my parents.... they wouldn't do things like that now would they
:-)...
Gale
|
452.31 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Sat Aug 22 1987 23:59 | 2 |
| I could never figure out how the wind could blow across an open
field without any trees to help it along.
|
452.32 | | CSSE::MDAVIS | Reality, just a collective hunch... | Mon Aug 24 1987 08:00 | 5 |
| I'm still convinced it's the ocean I'm hearing when I hold a conch
shell to my ear...
grins,
Marge
|
452.33 | Ah youth | CHEFS::MAURER | Helen | Mon Aug 24 1987 09:23 | 7 |
| I knew cats came in male and female varieties cos we had so many
of them.
I did think that radio stations had the actual musicians tromping
in and out of their studios to play their songs ...
HMM
|
452.34 | This is fun! | DELNI::HANDEL | | Mon Aug 24 1987 11:15 | 17 |
| When I was very young, my cousins, who were all older than me, told
me that there were alligators under my bed and that they would eat
me if I got up during the night ... (This was primarily to keep
me from bugging them). I would get into bed and NOT GET OUT FOR
ANY REASON!! I even made sure that my hands and feet were all on
the bed and not hanging over the edge. That phase lasted a long
time - about 20 years!! (Even now I think twice before getting
out of bed at night!)
The other part of step on a crack - break your mother's back, is
step on line, break your father's spine. My father had back problems
and I thought it was my fault for stepping on a line!
When I was in grade school and first heard of the Nazi atrocities,
I ran home and asked my mother if it were true - I thought that
my teacher was lying because people couldn't be that terrible -
unfortunately, she said it was.
|
452.35 | Seals?? | CSMADM::WATKINS | | Mon Aug 24 1987 11:45 | 11 |
| re.32
I had a friend who went so far as to insist she heard seals when
she held shells to her ear.
I tried and tried to hear them, but somehow, I only got surf...
I thought that after being smacked around by waves so many times
the sound just *stuck* with them. How, I couldn't explain. I just
know that's what happened.
Stacie
|
452.36 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I miss my vacation | Mon Aug 24 1987 12:34 | 37 |
| When I was about 3 yrs. old there was a family down the road who
had 3 Dobermans. Most of the time they were kept in a pen, but
one day I was playing outside and they came racing thru our yard.
My mother ran out to get me and my brother and then our (smaller,
friendlier) dog before they ate us up (or whatever Mom thought was
going to happen). Later that day my older brother told me that
I had better sleep that night with my hands under the covers because
those Dobermans could get lose again and if they did they would
leap right through my window and eat every one of my fingers off
my hands. For a few years after that I wouldn't go to sleep at
night with my hands outside of the covers. Even now I don't feel
really comfortable going to sleep with my hands outside the covers.
(I have to remind myself that Dobermans eating off peoples fingers
while they sleep is not a common problem.)
Also, when I was about 4 or 5 (when movies used to play consecutively)
I insisted that my mother and I sit thru a movie a 2nd time because
I wanted to see if it ended differently the next time.
Another misconception I had when I was very small is that no matter
how many children you have they all start out as infants and then
grow up. So, when people asked me how many children I wanted when
I grew up I used to say things like, I want 4 kids. I want a 10
year old girl, an 8 year old boy, a 5 year old girl and a 2 yr.
old boy. It took me awhile to realize that I couldn't have children
that would stay just those ages forever!
My mother says that when she was very young she thought that men
had boys and that women had girls. She was surprised when she learned
that women have all the babies. (Personally, I think men having
the boys would be an excellent idea and much more fair!)
My mother also thought that black people were solid black all the
way through.
Lorna
|
452.37 | Fun house | YODA::HOPKINS | | Mon Aug 24 1987 12:42 | 4 |
| I remember driving by a Playboy Club brightly painted and my youngest
brother saying "Hey look....a fun house!". We laughed for awhile
and then said "you're right about that".
|
452.38 | A fast growing city | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | The Elf! | Mon Aug 24 1987 17:39 | 10 |
|
When I was in grade school, my father and I used to watch Godzilla
movies almost every Saturday afternoon. Most of the destruction
scenes were strangely similar and after abaout my sixth Godzilla
-vs- whatever, I finally turned around and asked my dad:
"How'd they rebuild Tokyo so fast?"
Carol :-)
|
452.39 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Mon Aug 24 1987 18:36 | 12 |
| Saw this yesterday in a story the Chicago Tribune ran on Adult Children of
Alcoholics.
"I was 17 when I learned that some families sit down and eat dinner at the
same time every night. At my house, we ate after the cocktail hour, and
there was no way to predict when the cocktail hour would end."
Also, a coworker just told me this one. Her friend is attending
childbirth classes and one of the women in the class believed that after
she gave birth, she would no longer have a belly button.
|
452.40 | Take it literally! | TSG::STOCKER | | Mon Aug 24 1987 19:01 | 6 |
| I was a precocious reader and I didn't always understand what some of
the words meant. One day I asked my mother what a prostitute was, and she
told me is was a woman who was paid to sleep with men. I promptly
imagined a ward full of men in beds, and this woman handing out
teddy bears! Not a bad way to earn a living.
S.
|
452.41 | And "Man" sometimes means "Woman" | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Aug 24 1987 22:20 | 6 |
| Another one. When I was little, I knew that the vowels were
"A, E, I, O, U, and sometimes Y." I knew how "my" was spelled.
I worried that sometimes "Y" wouldn't be a vowel, so that "my"
wouldn't be a word, and I would lose ownership of "my" things.
Ann B.
|
452.42 | Misconceptions ? I got a million.... | MPGS::BLANCHARDD | | Tue Aug 25 1987 01:27 | 19 |
| I've always been a person of strange ideas. My childhood
misconceptions, however aren't nearly as bizzare as my adult ones....
From childhood :
* When I asked my mother where I came from, she said "Dr. H. delivered
you." I assumed that Dr. H. worked for the U.P.S. when he wasn't
being a doctor.
* I thought that the purpose of salt was to cool down food that
was too hot; thus the hotter my food was, the more I would salt
it.
From adulthood :
* I thought the Alps and the Appalachians were the same thing,
they just called them the Alps for short.
* I thought Mount Rushmore was a natural rock formation.
* (this is the most bizzarre) I thought that the swans on the
Swanboats in Boston were real,live giant swans.
Denise
|
452.43 | they never really tell you... | IMAGIN::KOLBE | She's back - watch out world | Tue Aug 25 1987 02:59 | 9 |
|
In the 5th grade myself and several friends had been convinced that "french"
kissing caused pregnancy. This knowledge was passed on through the whisper
and giggle method. It was never actually mentioned in our sex education class
how "it" actually happened so speculation ran wild.
To this day I have trouble walking down the street with someone I like and
not saying "bread and butter" if we passed on different sides of some object
like a sign. liesl
|
452.44 | blue bloods | FOCUS1::BACOT | | Tue Aug 25 1987 05:11 | 12 |
| I used to think that blood was blue until it got outside the body
when the air hit it, the blood would turn red. Obviously this
transformation happened very quickly...
If you rub the dust from the wings of a butterfly, onto your shoulders
you can fly... (my sister used this one to convince me to 'fly'
off of the roof of our play house.)
Angela
|
452.45 | Re: .44 Wait a minute ... | CHEFS::MAURER | Helen | Tue Aug 25 1987 08:59 | 3 |
|
Isn't oxygen-depleted blood blue until exposed to more oxygen?
|
452.46 | | VIKING::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Tue Aug 25 1987 09:50 | 5 |
| <--(.44,.45)
Yah, I think Helen's right. Which is (I'm grasping at vague memories
here) why they do these circulatory models with the arteries in
red and the veins in blue (or is it the other way around? Bonniiieee?)
|
452.47 | More memories moved up... | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Tue Aug 25 1987 11:42 | 15 |
|
Well, it's a visual aid. I suppose you could pick any two colors
you wanted. It helps all you budding anatomists (that sounds vaguely
obscene) differentiate vessels which carry blood to the heart (veins)
from those which carry it from the heart (arteries).
Of course, my anatomy book showed pulmonary arteries as blue and
pulmonary veins as red (?) As did the, uh, latex-filled specimens
we dissected.
*Sigh* I think oxygenated blood and deoxygenated blood are two
different colors, but they may be just two different shades of red.
Bonnie?
DFW
|
452.48 | Neat topic | MOSAIC::MODICA | | Tue Aug 25 1987 11:48 | 3 |
|
I used to pledge allegiance to Richard Stands. I always wondered
who he was and how he became so famous.
|
452.49 | | KLAATU::THIBAULT | be-bop-a-lulu, baby | Tue Aug 25 1987 13:05 | 6 |
| When he was in the 7th or 8th grade, my blue-eyed brother was told by his
biology teacher that two brown-eyed people could not have a blue-eyed
baby. He came home all upset and blubbering about being adopted. Ma set
him straight, but sometimes I still think he was adopted :-).
Jenna
|
452.50 | One for the horror_story note in OBJECTIVISM | ARMORY::CHARBONND | And I mean it. A.R. | Tue Aug 25 1987 13:45 | 2 |
| Amazing - a *biology* teacher with no notion of paired recessives.
I hope your mother straightened out the teacher. Sheesh!
|
452.51 | Sometimes red, Sometimes blue | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Delta Long = -d(sin A/cos Lat) | Tue Aug 25 1987 13:57 | 11 |
| To settle the blood color issue:
In Mammals the coloring in the blood is Hemeglobin. Oxygenated hemeglobin
is red, Deoxygenated hemeglobin is blue. If you look carefully at the
veins in your arm, you can see the bluish tint.
Of course, Crustacians have blue blood all the time (It uses hemocyanin as
the oxygen-binding protein, which is the main coloring in blood)
--David
|
452.52 | Kids say the most stereotypical things... | VAXUUM::CORMAN | | Tue Aug 25 1987 14:49 | 15 |
| When I was a very young girl, I couldn't wait to grow up and "have
a crack" (read: have cleavage). Every girl gets a crack when she's
grown up, of course.
As a Jew, I knew that the religions of the world were: Jewish and
other. Other meant Christians (kids who went to Christian school
so nuns could hit them) and blacks. Someone finally told me that there
are black Jews in the world, and it took awhile for me to figure out
how that could be.
And, Chinese had eyes that slanted up and Japenese had
eyes that slanted down and they could swap if they felt like it.
Ignorance is not really bliss. Barbara
|
452.54 | Parents | USMRM2::PMONFALCONE | | Tue Aug 25 1987 15:48 | 8 |
| The greatest misconception I had as a child, was that my father
knew everything, could make anything happen...like when the
highway was 'wet' about a half a mile ahead of us, he always said
'the road will be dry when we reach that point'...it always was.
I'm a lot wiser now.
Paula
|
452.55 | | NRADM::CONGER | | Tue Aug 25 1987 16:19 | 11 |
|
RE .51
I was taught that deoxygenated blood was *rust* colored,
and oxygenated blood was bright red. The color is due to iron
which is a building block of hemoglobin. The blue veins you
see are caused by the way light passes through your skin - much
the same way the ocean looks blue.
|
452.56 | A Request | PSYCHE::SULLIVAN | | Tue Aug 25 1987 16:54 | 19 |
|
At the risk of creating a huge rathole, I want to point out an alarming
trend that I've seen developing in this note. It seems that some
of us (in revealing past "misconceptions" that we've had) have revealed
some ideas that I have found to be rather racist. (Am I the only
one who has felt this way?) I'm sure that hasn't been the intent,
and I know that the purpose of this note is to describe things that
we *used to* believe, but all the same, I've felt some discomfort.
A request: if you're adding a "misconception" to the list, and
you're making mention of a racial or ethnic group of which you are
*not* a member, before you post the note, imagine a member of that
group reading what you've written.
Thanks.
In sisterhood,
Justine
|
452.57 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Tue Aug 25 1987 21:23 | 53 |
| re 452.56 by PSYCHE::SULLIVAN >
>some of us (in revealing past "misconceptions" that we've had) have
>revealed some ideas that I have found to be rather racist.
None of the conceptions strike me as racist. They do show what goofy ideas
we can get about people who look different than our own racial group. And
not from an adult source who is saying cruel things, but just from our own
minds groping with the universe.
Here are two more racial & sexual 'misconceptions' I know about.
A book I read (ummmm ... Growing Up Black or Women in Slavery?) told about
a young black girl who lived in terror of whites. She had been told to
steer clear of whites, especially white men, but had no idea why. She
got the message they were incredibly powerful and controlled her fate.
She developed the idea they were gods, invincible. Until the day she saw a
white man brought home from an accident. Bleeding. And she realized whites
were just people, like herself. Changed her view of the universe.
And here is one that made me fall off my chair at DEC Bedford, about 1980.
We got on the subject of marriage and divorce. A fellow, a very likeable guy,
told us about his first wife. He said, with stories that proved his point,
that she was selfish, insecure, demanding, childish, spoiled, and wildly
illogical. We were astonished at his stories of the stunts she pulled.
Finally I said, "You must have been surpised, after you got married, to
find out she was like that."
He said, "Oh, I knew she was like that before we got married."
Of course I asked, "Then why did you marry her?"
And he said, looking abashed, but with real honesty, "I thought all women
were like that."
Turned out, he had spent most of his life in an almost all male universe
and really believed girls and women were totally separate creatures. After
all, they sure looked like different creatures to him. To this day, I am
full of respect for his honesty in telling us what his thoughts had been as
a young man of 20 or 22. He knew telling us this was risking flames (thus
the abashed look) but he opted for honesty and certainly widened my sense of
how men can view, and mis-view, women.
I grew up Catholic and find the Catholic misconceptions a riot. I'd love
to hear more group misconceptions, about how baby Baptists thought priests
would kidnap them for secret baptism, about how baby Chinese thought white
people were clumsy, baby Jewish kids though gentiles couldn't read.
I myself near fainted at age 8 or 9 when a brother told me Mr. Zakowski was
Jewish. I had assumed the Jewish people were long gone, like the Roman
emperor and the Pharisees. Is it possible that my goofy assumption could
be seen as having any particle of anti-Semitism? Meigs
|
452.58 | | MOSAIC::TARBET | Margaret Mairhi | Wed Aug 26 1987 10:41 | 20 |
| Justine, my reaction to the stories that talk about inter-racial
misconceptions is a sense of mingled dismay and hope: dismay that we
could be so ill-taught as children by our parents and society, hope
that the sacrifices of the civil rights movement will one day result in
a world where such misconceptions no longer occur. The stories don't
seem to me to be racialist in the present tense, but I would be glad to
have the opinions, by mail if necessary, of our black sisters and
brothers on the issue.
The house I used to own in Minnesota had been built in the summer of
1890, and among the debris in the attic I found a sales brochure for
Edison phonographic recordings dated November 1906. There was a
section in the booklet for "Coon Songs" illustrated with what I'm sure
must have seemed in 1906 really amusing drawings and descriptions
of the songs being offered. Naturally the songs took for granted the
worst possible stereotypes, and my children were by turns puzzled,
horrified, and amused that people could ever have been so ignorant.
=maggie
|
452.59 | Who needs money.... | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | The Elf! | Wed Aug 26 1987 11:36 | 19 |
|
I was reminded of this particular misconception when my niece said
the following: (before my niece, my younger brother said it, and
before him, *I* said it!)
Walking through one of the local department stores we happened by
the toy section. Melissa spied something she wanted in the worst
way and begged me to buy it for her.
"But, Melissa," I tried to explain, "I don't have any money."
"You don't need money," she assured me. "You can just write a check
like grandma does!"
....Yeah......
Carol :-)
|
452.60 | A little bit sheltered | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I gave up daytime TV for this? | Wed Aug 26 1987 12:10 | 13 |
| My mother never smoked, drank, or swore. I guess I associated this
behavior with the way mothers were supposed to act. When I was
about 9 or 10 yrs. old I went over to a friend's house after school.
A woman was sitting at the kitchen table smoking a cigaret and
drinking a can of beer. When we came in she said something to my
friend in kind of a loud, boisterous voice. When we went in my
friend's bedroom I said, Who is SHE? My friend said, My mother,
who else? I was flabbergasted. I said, She's your MOTHER? Your
mother drinks beer and smokes?!!!! I thought all mothers were prim,
proper and ladylike.
Lorna
|
452.61 | Kids are strange | CANDY::PITERAK | | Wed Aug 26 1987 12:27 | 15 |
|
When I was very young (about 4) my parents bought a house in a very
Catholic neighborhood. The "Holy See" was also the home of the
Bishop (about two blocks away!)
We were the only protestants for miles around, and I had never seen
any nuns before. They petrified me. I thought they were boogy-men.
They filled all my concepts of what boogy-men had to look like!
Of course, my reaction to nuns was a clear sign to the neighborhood
kids that I was a "non-Catholic". Consequently, everytime I was
out playing and it rained enough for water to run in the gutters
down the street, I got "caught" and hauled to the gutter to be
properly baptized. I figure I'm a baptized Catholic about a
thousand times!!!
|
452.62 | more on blood | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Aug 27 1987 00:15 | 18 |
| On the questions a while back of the color of deoxygenated blood
- it is indeed still red but a darker more purplish red, rather
than being blue. If you cut your self you are most likely cutting
a vein - as they are near to the surface, while arteries are deep
- and the blood that flows out is indeed red. Veins appear blue
as they are seen through the skin as was mentioned previously.
And Dave, there is a good reason why the plumonary artery is
blue on anatomical models, it is carrying *unoxygenated blood*
from the heart to the lungs, and the *pulmonary vein* is colored
red because it is carrying oxgenated blood from the lungs to the
heart to be sent out to the body. That is a very common question
on Biology tests to see if people are paying attention.
Bonnie
(and sorry to be so long in answering, I am on vacation this week
:-) :-) )
|
452.63 | Breakfast of Monsters | MEMV02::BULLOCK | | Thu Aug 27 1987 10:40 | 12 |
| I thought EVERYBODY knew enough not to sleep with hands or feet
hanging over the side of the bed. If you do, the monsters that
are under your bed at night EAT THEM. And, did you know that if
you stay completely under the covers that monsters can't get you?
Did you ever wonder as a kid (or now, like I do) what "getting"
someone meant, as in "the monster will GET me!"??
:-)
Jane
|
452.64 | Just a normal part of growing up... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Aug 27 1987 10:58 | 17 |
| RE: .63
Well, it's good to know that I'm not the only one who had
monsters living under her bed. :-)
I wasn't that worried about hanging hands and feet over the
side of my bed, but I *did* used to jump into bed from a safe
distance (to avoid having my ankles grabbed if I got too close
to the bed.)
If I had to go to the bathroom at night, I'd jump out of bed
and back in from the greatest distance I could manage at that
hour.
The monster under *MY* bed had fairly short arms, luckily. :-)
Suzanne...
|
452.65 | Dreams.... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Thu Aug 27 1987 11:21 | 41 |
| One other thing is that I used to believe that dreams were
*REAL*. I had a dream when I was 5 that my parents used to allow
me to dive off the pier in Honolulu to get the coins tossed
by people coming in on the ocean liners. I was nearly 8 years
old before I realized that it hadn't really happened. (Luckily,
I seldom mentioned this experience to anyone, but it wasn't because
I didn't believe the dream. I just assumed that my whole FAMILY
knew that I used to dive for coins, so there was no need to
bring it up.) :-)
When I had my OWN child, it occurred to me that HE (as a toddler)
might think that HIS dreams were real, too.
I also thought it might be amusing to hear about the kinds of
dreams that a 2 year old might have, so I explained "dreams"
to Ryan and asked him to start telling me about any dreams that
he could remember having when he woke up in the morning.
[I should mention that it took quite a bit of explaining to
get the concept of "dreaming" across to a 2 year old. I finally
got through to him when I suggested scenerio's -- "You are out
somewhere and doing something, then you open your eyes and you
are really just in your bed." When he finally caught on, his
eyes opened wide -- he *HAD* noticed that, and he definitely
*DID* think that his dreams were real.]
The dreams of a 2 or 3 year old child are incredibly entertaining!!
Balloons and peanut butter sandwiches loomed large in Ryan's
dream life as a toddler. He started telling me his dreams several
times a week, and they were wonderful!!
Ryan's pre-school teachers got the benefit of his naptime dreams
during the day, and they found the experience as delightful
as I did.
If you can get the idea through to a small child (and it's not
easy, believe me,) I *highly* recommend trying to get a child
to tell his or her dreams. It was one of the most enjoyable
parts of Ryan's early childhood for me.
Suzanne... :-)
|
452.66 | silly kid! | CLOSUS::WOODWARD | | Thu Aug 27 1987 11:32 | 4 |
| I thought skyscrapers were bulldozers that flew around and pushed
the clouds out of the sky.
woody
|
452.67 | Wanting more of a good thing | SSDEVO::CHAMPION | The Elf! | Thu Aug 27 1987 12:55 | 8 |
|
And how many of us got up early to check the tree again on December
26th to see if Santa had left more goodies?
:-)
Carol
|
452.68 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I gave up daytime TV for this? | Thu Aug 27 1987 13:05 | 11 |
| I wonder how many kids have been told that if they dug a deep enough
hole they would get to China. I know my brother and I tried digging
our way to China at least once.
I was also afraid of the hands under the bed grabbing my ankles
when I got out of bed at night, and it is funny how safe just one
blanket could make us feel, as though whatever it was that was going
to "get us" couldn't easily toss away a blanket and get us anyway!
Lorna
|
452.69 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Thu Aug 27 1987 17:39 | 12 |
| I remember being about 3 and telling my mother that when I got bigger
I would grow up and she would grow down and be a baby. She tried
to convince me it wasn't true, but I insisted it was.
(A shrink would have a hey-day with that one!)
In some ways I wasn't so far off. I think a lot about her support
and resources and potential for the next 20 some-odd years.
Holly
|
452.70 | What goes UP must come DOWN... | SBI::CONLON | | Thu Aug 27 1987 18:12 | 22 |
| RE: .69
Holly, when I was a child, I *also* believed that people grew
taller all during their young years, and then they grew shorter
when they got to their older years.
My evidence for this was the fact that most of the very old
people I saw at the time all seemed to be taller than me but
shorter than my parents (so I decided that they must all be
on the way back down to my size.) :-)
I think I had also heard adults talk about how elderly people
*do* lose some height as they reach their most senior years.
I took it a step farthur.
(I'm sure that changing nutritional norms also had something
to do with the overall differences in average heights among
young adults and senior citizens.) It takes lots and lots
of junk food to get tall, after all, and the folks in their
senior years didn't have that advantage. :-) :-)
Suzanne... :-)
|
452.71 | Shrinking | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Thu Aug 27 1987 18:18 | 12 |
| I didn't think I was growing - just that all the grown-ups and objects
were shrinking.
And I too tried to tell my grandmother that I would grow up and
she would grow down.
I also thought that men (with the hats they used to wear) were hiding
something on top of them, where kids couldn't see. I never did
figure out where they hid it (whatever) when they sat down or took
off their hat.
Elizabeth
|
452.72 | real dreams | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Aug 27 1987 23:04 | 4 |
| Talking about believing your dreams - I *knew* I could fly for
quite a long time, until I tried to explain it to my mother.
Bonnie
|
452.73 | soar through the air... | LUDWIG::DAUGHAN | sassy | Thu Aug 27 1987 23:13 | 3 |
| me too bonnie
i still do have flying dreams ;-)
kelly
|
452.74 | I was a nasty little brute | PASTIS::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Fri Aug 28 1987 06:34 | 7 |
| When I was about 10 I got a magnets set for Christmas. My young
sister kept pestering to play with it too. I told her that if she
didn't go away I would magnetise the iron in her blood, and
demonstrated graphically with iron filings what would happen.
She had nightmares for several nights after, but she did leave
me alone.
|
452.75 | Learning about Prejudice | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Fri Aug 28 1987 07:42 | 35 |
|
On racial misconceptions...
I come from very Irish Catholic stock. Nevertheless I had an Aunt Betsy
& Uncle Sherm Rosenfield (Jewish) who were an integral part of my
childhood, & whom I dearly loved. Uncle Sherm taught me magic tricks,
played cards with the kids, & they both seemed terribly wise & very
cosmopolitain (they lived in Chicago & knew all the latest trends & had
met famous people). I knew they were Jewish & later discovered we were
not related by blood, but they remain my Aunt & Uncle, & really part of
the family.
When I was 11 the term anti-Semetism came up & I was shocked to find
the many people hated Jews as people. Now in Catholic school we had
been taught some nasty myths about Jews rejecting Christ, but our
parish was very Slavic & there were lots of WWII refugees who had axes
to grind against Jews, so my parents set me straight. What shocked
me was that non-Catholics hated Jews. In fact lots of people did.
Then I found a book about Auschwitz! I cried pretty hard that day.
I knew there was prejudice (I grew up during the Civil Rights movement
in the 60s) & I knew there was war, but death camps were a new &
terrible twist. I grew up that day & can honestly say I have never
been the same since.
On another form of prejudice....
Our very Roman Catholic family moved to the country when I was six,
into a very Dutch Reform neighborhood. We were branded as "idol
worshipers" by the family next door and shunned for about a year. Both
sets of kids were bored stiff & dying to play together so a theological
peace was achieved (both sides agreed not to evangilize). But for a
long time thereafter I wondered about those statues...
|
452.76 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Fri Aug 28 1987 09:37 | 16 |
| .75 reminded me of another misconception.
As a young child I heard someone say that Jews were "incomplete
Christians". (How offensive!)
Since everyone else I knew was at least a nominal Christian, I kept
looking for missing body parts when I met Jews. When someone
explained to me that Jewish baby boys are circumcised, I thought I
had it figured out.
When someone else explained to me that most baby boys, including
Christians, were circumcised (this was the 1950s), I was totally
confused again.
Holly
|
452.77 | Movies on TV? | MEMV01::BULLOCK | Flamenco--NOT flamingo!! | Fri Aug 28 1987 10:14 | 7 |
| How about this one: whenever I went to a movie as a kid, I always
thought that, as soon as I got home, I could turn on the TV and
see the movie again...no matter how many times I tried it, I still
beleived that the movie I'd gone to see was on TV somewhere. A
screen is a screen to a kid!
Jane
|
452.78 | | USAT02::CARLSON | set person/positive | Fri Aug 28 1987 10:28 | 15 |
| re. previous several
I think what Angela meant about the blue blood was, didn't you ever
cut yourself as a child and look quickly to see if it was blue,
right at first? I always did.
I too, dreamt I could fly, by running with my knees up high. If
I did it just right, up I'd go. It was sooo real, but it never
worked.
Whenever we wanted ice-cream after dinner, my Dad would tell us,
You can have it, when the cows come home. I spent a long time
waiting for those silly cows!
Theresa.
|
452.79 | Star light, star bright | CIVIC::ROSEN | linda rosen**aug baby | Fri Aug 28 1987 14:04 | 7 |
| I wished on the first star I saw every night when I was 14-17 years
old! I truly believed the little rhyme "Star light, star bright,
first star I see tonight. Wish I may, wish I might, have the wish
I wish tonight" (Little was I to know that Madonna would make this
rhyme a hit!) I even do it sometimes now, it couldn't hurt!!
-Linda
|
452.80 | ..doesn't everyone?? | MEMV01::BULLOCK | Flamenco--NOT flamingo!! | Fri Aug 28 1987 14:10 | 7 |
| ..gee, I thought EVERYONE wished on the first star!
I still do,
Jane
:-I
|
452.81 | wish on the first star? always | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Fri Aug 28 1987 15:27 | 1 |
|
|
452.82 | but i'm better now! | SKYLIT::SAWYER | i'll take 2 myths and 3 traditions...to go.. | Fri Aug 28 1987 16:58 | 23 |
|
great stuff!!!!
funny..and hit home, too!
some of my old misconceptions;
1. used to think that you had to get married and have children
and buy a house so that your children could get married and have
children and buy a house so that their children.....
2. use to think that america was a great country
The greatest in the world....!
funny, huh?
3. use to think that you needed certain clothes for different
occasions.
4. use to think that th egovernment actually cared about the people!
boy, how naive i was...
|
452.83 | | HPSMEG::POPIENIUCK | | Mon Aug 31 1987 17:57 | 5 |
| One of things I remember to be so disappointing to me as a child
was when I went on the show Boom Town ( Rex Trailer) with the Brownies,
at about age five. Before going on the set I really thought Boom
Town was a real town. How disappointed I was to find a town made of
cardboard!
|
452.84 | Frost Heaves | TALLIS::MEGA | | Tue Sep 01 1987 09:43 | 21 |
|
When I was little, I couldn't figure out how my parents 'memorized' the way to
my grandparents houses; they were *so* far away and it took a whole *hour* to
get there.
I had no idea what dentures were. One day, while walking down the street, my
grandfather casually took out his teeth! I kept trying to pull out my upper
palate for 6 months. I thought I had to loosen it up or something.
I too thought that there were real musicians at radio stations.
I thought that when I stood really close to the side of a tall building and
looked straight up that the building was indeed falling over.
I thought the street sign 'THICKLY SETTLED' meant that the road ahead was
packed down really hard or something. I couldn't figure out why they bothered
to put up a sign to tell you this. I thought all pavement was packed down
really hard.
I didn't know 'FROST HEAVES' had anything to do with the road. I thought they
were making a statement, something like 'grass grows'.
|
452.85 | exit | SHIRE::BIZE | | Tue Sep 01 1987 09:56 | 15 |
| One of our little neighbours died in a car accident, and my daughter
learned about it through another of our neighbours who told her:
"Jessy is now a little star in the sky, and from up above she sees
you and waves at you". I found that incredibly stupid, but did not
want to contradict the lady openly, which means I had to stand for
several weeks having my daughter waving to numerous stars at bedtime,
'cause any of them could be Jessy.
This same neighbour also had her husband every Xmas dress up as
Father Xmas and bring in the presents. One day my daughter came
home FURIOUS: "Mom, why did you tell me Father Xmas did not exist?"
"because he doesn't, dear", "Well he does, because Smilka showed
me a PICTURE of him giving her presents!"
Joana
|
452.86 | I thought a little girl of 45 pounds could help balance building... | NEXUS::CONLON | | Tue Sep 01 1987 09:57 | 11 |
| When I was a kid, we took a trip to New York city and did a
lot of sightseeing (including visiting the Empire State
Building.)
My whole family went to the window to see the view of the
city, but I stayed in the middle of the observation room.
I felt for sure that if every one of us went to the same
side of the building to look out, the building would topple
over.
Suzanne...
|
452.87 | Trained Fleas | CANDY::PITERAK | | Tue Sep 01 1987 10:07 | 11 |
|
When I was little I really thought that flea markets were where
you bought trained fleas.
It took me the longest time to figure out that "antiques" were what
I saw and read as "anti ques".
When I was in the first grade I couldn't wait to learn to tell time.
I knew how to read, I knew how to write. I figured that telling
time was the last great hurdle of being totally educated, and there
wasn't anything else to learn after that.
|
452.88 | It's good to know that *no*one* understood anything! | DINER::SHUBIN | There's noplace like noplace | Tue Sep 01 1987 19:14 | 9 |
|
Someone mentioned that she thought her folks' car knew the way to
grandmother's house. I wondered about that, too. I didn't know about
the little lever to turn on the turn signal, so I figured that the car
knew when to signal for a turn.
When I first started being driven to school with other kids on the
block, I didn't understand why they called it a "car pull". Of course,
"car pool" is a pretty weird phrase, too.
|
452.89 | odd sounding words. | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Tue Sep 01 1987 22:21 | 3 |
| Well I remember thinking that the expression "in exalted Deo"
had something to do with salting something.... and wondered
where the salt fit into the servce.
|
452.90 | a few more | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Wed Sep 02 1987 09:56 | 12 |
| Bonnie, I remember a similar one from church choir.
We had to sing something which sounded like "in eggshell seas Deo",
and I kept picturing seas of eggshells. How surprised I was to
find that the phrase was written "in Excelsis Deo"!
I had a fight with a teacher once (and got thrown out of class)
for insisting that "The Little Colonel" was pronounced "The Little
Colonial". (We learned phonetics so they shouldn't have blamed
me!)
Holly
|
452.91 | Ecclesiastic Mysteries | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Wed Sep 02 1987 10:06 | 16 |
|
re -1
Irene (my SO) used to say the Hail Mary at age 5 with the following
lines:
Hey you Mary the Lore with thee
Bested art though monk women
& bested is the food of thy womb Jesus
Hairy apes, mother & God
play for us sinners
now and the tower of death, Hey men
She wondered what the hairy apes had to do with Mary but her
mother laughed so hard she never got a straight answer.
|
452.92 | | CSSE::MDAVIS | briefcase <==> bookbag | Wed Sep 02 1987 11:09 | 7 |
| I could never understand why my Dad had to turn the steering wheel
(even slightly) when he was driving straight down the street. I
thought if he just held it straight except at the corners the
car would do fine.
grins,
|
452.93 | I never read up much on cars | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I gave up daytime TV for this? | Wed Sep 02 1987 12:36 | 12 |
| The first time I drove a car in a snowstorm, at 17, I was surprised
to see the windshield fog up so much that I couldn't see though
it! I opened my window and peered around the car with snow hitting
my face all the way home.
When I got home my father said, "Well, how'd you like driving in
the snow?" I said, "Well, it wouldn't have been bad if I could've
seen out the windshield." He said, "Why didn't you turn on the
defrost?" "Defrost? What's that Dad?"
Lorna
|
452.94 | can you say elemento? | MILRAT::KALLOCK | | Wed Sep 02 1987 13:56 | 20 |
|
There was one adjective that I could never figure out : ELEMENTO.
It had to be pretty important, because it singled out the letter
"P" from all the other letters in the alphabet. I always wondered
why "P" was so much more noteworthy than the other letters.
As in the song: "A,B,C,D,E,F,G...H,I,J,K,ELEMENTO P....."
Also, I thought that you got pregnant like you got mumps or chicken
pox or a cold. Somehow, you had to be married to get pregnant,
but I never figured out how the pregnancy germs knew how people
were married or female.....
I thought heaven was a place with a big, old hutch cabinet filled
with cans of Calo cat food when I was really little. Never figured
out why everyone made such a big deal about a place like that,
especially when there were no cats allowed.
this is fun!
Ann
|
452.95 | When I was your age... | WAGON::RITTNER | | Wed Sep 02 1987 14:21 | 9 |
| My oldest brother told me when I was about 6 that G_d gave people
babies. This was after I chose him to be the unlucky target for
my question "Where do babies come from?" To make matters worse I
asked him the question in front of my other brother. Now, you have
to realize my oldest brother was only 12 at the time! Anyway I remember
asking him several times after "How does G_d know just the right
time to give people babies!!??" Poor Peter!!
Elisabeth
|
452.96 | | HPSMEG::POPIENIUCK | | Wed Sep 02 1987 17:22 | 12 |
| I too, thought the car knew when to turn because the directional would
go on everytime before the car would turn.
And I also thought I could fly, my father used to put a belt around
my waste pretending I was flying, but I thought I could fly with
out the belt, until I tried that is! BOOM! I think a lot of children
think they can fly, my sister was devasted when she bought her son
a costume with a cape on it, and he said NOW I can jump out my window
and fly, my sister instantley explained to him that people can't
fly. I think this a big misconception to young children.
|
452.97 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Wed Sep 02 1987 23:43 | 4 |
| I can only remember one so far - when I was about 5 I wanted the
elevator in an office building to stop at the Magazine level - I
thought that's what it said - it was actually Mezzanine.
Steve
|
452.98 | birds and bees lore | SUPER::HENDRICKS | Not another learning experience! | Thu Sep 03 1987 08:18 | 11 |
| I had always heard that God gave women babies when they got married,
too! When I was 6, I could read Reader's Digest without too much trouble.
One day my grandmother and mother were talking and said something
about God giving people babies after they get married (for my benefit).
I looked at them and said, "Well then why does Reader's Digest have
a story called 'The Plight of the Unwed Mother'?".
I'm surprised we didn't lose my grandmother on the spot!
Holly
|
452.99 | No Horse... | SONATA::HICKOX | Stow Vice | Thu Sep 03 1987 09:31 | 9 |
|
Re: .83
Yes, Rex Trailer was a disappointment, but I was more disappointed
by the fact that he just ran and jumped over the fence and there
was no horse....
Mark
|
452.100 | | AKOV85::JOYCE | | Thu Sep 03 1987 17:27 | 11 |
| When I was six years old and in the first grade, my teacher was
out sick for a long time (long enough for the substitute teacher
to have learned all our names - to this day my only measure of the
length of time for my teachers absence). This was about the time
of the Boston strangler. Having heard of the Boston strangler on
the radio and knowing that my [single] teacher lived in Boston,
I was convinced that he had gotten her and that 'they' didn't want
to tell us. When she returned, I was greatly surprised and relieved,
and felt a sort of 'restoration of faith'.
Mary
|
452.101 | Daddy, were you alive with the dinosaurs? | PASTIS::MONAHAN | I am not a free number, I am a telephone box | Sun Sep 06 1987 13:20 | 5 |
| Yesterday, my 8 year old daughter wanted to know why plugs were
referred to as "male" or "female". After I had given a graphic
description, her next question was :-
"Was sex invented before plugs, or after?"
|
452.102 | Here's another strange kid... | STKEIS::LJUNGBERG | | Mon Sep 07 1987 13:50 | 18 |
| This is beginning to be quite a collection! Fun!
As a 4-year old I believed that babies cried because their parents
bit them (of course my parents never did anything like it so I don't
know how I ever got the idea).
I found out how wrong this was while playing with a little friend.
I was the mother and she was the baby... Her mother wouldn't let
us play for months.
A couple of years later my parents wanted me to take preschool English
lessons. I was really looking forward to it because I thought they
would be held in the movie theater (that's the only place English
was heard - I saw all the Tarzan movie, dad translated) I was extremely
dissapointed to find that the lessons were held in a classroom.
Ann
|
452.103 | Strange | OURVAX::JEFFRIES | the best is better | Tue Sep 08 1987 15:14 | 8 |
| I used to think that "white people" were that way because they were
born before they were done, thats why they would lay in the sun
with oil all over their bodies trying to finish cooking.
I was also told that catholics were to be pitied because the couldn't
pray directly to God but had to go through a saint, we protestants
were the chosen ones and god would communicate directly with us.
|
452.104 | Burn'n down the house | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Tue Sep 08 1987 16:12 | 3 |
| I used to think brick houses wouldn't burn down.
|
452.105 | two mothers? egads... | CADSE::FRANK | Lesley | Fri Sep 18 1987 15:14 | 12 |
| doesn't every little kid think that when you close your
eyes, no one can see you....
I used to think that I had two mothers that looked exactly
alike, one was good and one was bad. When my mother was
being nice to me the good mother was the one I saw and
the bad mother existed in another dimension (yes, I was a
sci fi buff at an early age). When my mother yelled at me,
what had really happened was my good mother was whisked into
the other dimension and the bad mother took her place in
this dimension. It took me quite a while to figure out
that people could be BOTH good and bad.
|
452.106 | escalators | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Mon Sep 21 1987 09:47 | 10 |
| From VNS (Vogon News Service) 18-Sep-1987:
> A New York woman was killed when an escalator failed, the bottom step
> opened and she was sucked into the mechanism. [In Britain it is mandatory
> to have emergency stop buttons at the bottom and top].
I used to think this was one of my unreasonable fears about escalators.
How will I ever make it through the Christmas shopping season now?
...Karen
|
452.107 | Can you say Arthur Godfrey? Sure you can. | USFHSL::PENFROY | | Wed Sep 23 1987 11:10 | 12 |
|
A story my mom and dad always tell is about they way kids used to
pronounce the name "Arthur Godfrey". A cousin visited us once and got
real excited when Arthur Godfrey was on TV and started yelling
"Oppy Goppy! Oppy Goppy!". He was about 5 years old. My sister became
very indignant at this gross mispronounciation. She being *6* years
old felt that it was her place to correct her *younger* cousin.
In a very proud manner she said,
"Why do you keep calling him Oppy Goppy? His name is Arffy Garffy!!"
Paul
|
452.108 | Ah, anatomy | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Wed Sep 23 1987 17:20 | 27 |
| When I was in 1st Grade the big story going around was that you
should never swallow your chewing gum because it would stick your
lungs together.
When I lost my first tooth, I thought I had done something wrong;
I fell down and smacked my chin while playing, and then, lo and
behold this tooth started getting loose! I lived for two weeks
in silent fear and resigned despair and finally ate the tooth by
accident in a mouthful of Cheerios. My grandmother was the first
to notice my gap, and delightedly called my mom's attention to it.
I was stunned; you mean it wasn't my fault? I'm not going to die?
I'm not going to be punished? This is _normal_? (Learning about
sex was nothing compared to this!)
But the best story I have is about my younger brother, who was shown
at age 4 how to milk our neighbor's cow. Fascinated he squeezed
each udder and got a stream of milk from each one, whereupon he
hollered over at my mother "Mom, look, this cow has four penises!"
I did not exactly believe in a closet monster or an under-the-bed
monster, but I did believe there was something in the mirror at
night. I would actually crawl into the bathroom to avoid the gaze
of whatever frightful creature lurked there. I wasn't sure what
it was but I was sure it was real.
Marcia
|
452.109 | cows and such... | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Wed Sep 23 1987 19:14 | 10 |
| Marcia,
The story about your younger brother was great! It reminded me
of one my mother told me. Seems she and her sisters decided to
"milk" her grandfather's prize bull! And he was P****d! Her
grandfather, I mean; she never did tell me what the bull thought
of it ;-)
Rita
|
452.110 | a little knowledge is a dangerous thing | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Sep 24 1987 10:47 | 20 |
| "Swallowed gum makes your lungs stick together" reminded me of the
fear that if I swallowed any kind of fruit seed, it would sprout
inside of me and start growing. I also thought that goldenrod caused
hayfever, so whenever I walked by the field of goldenrod on the way
to my grandmother's house after school, I held my breath...
Hmm. I just remembered another one. My brother is quite a bit
older than me (12 years) and I remember a dinner time conversation
he was having with my mother and older sister (she's 11 years older
than me) about shepherds and their sheep. Maybe it wasn't a
conversation, maybe he just told an off-color joke, but it involved
sexual intercourse between man and beast. I knew how puppies were
made, and babies, too, I guess, but not knowing that it was impossible
to reproduce between man and ewe, I wondered what the offspring would
be like: would it look like a sheep, but be able to talk? Would it
look like a person but only bleat? Would it look a little like both,
with maybe hair like wool or a bahh-bahh laugh? I was really disturbed
by these thoughts...
CQ
|
452.111 | You mean it's okay to fail this one? | NAC::BENCE | Shetland Pony School of Problem Solving | Thu Sep 24 1987 11:22 | 18 |
|
When I was in grammar school they tested our eyesight every year.
Unfortunately, they never explained that this was a test that it
was okay to fail...
I'd fail the test at the normal distance, they'd move me closer,
I'd pass, then they'd move me back again and I'd pass at the original
distance (golly gee, that series of letters was easy to memorize).
I thought it was like all the other tests we took in first and second
grade.
No one tumbled to my advanced nearsightedness until I was 8. One
Sunday in church I asked my mother "What time is it?", she said "Look
at the clock", I replied "What clock?"
By the way, how many of you nearsighted folk were surprised the
first time you realized that the leaves at the top the tree were
all separate?
|
452.112 | Oh, so that's what's written on the blackboard... | PASCAL::BAZEMORE | Barbara b. | Thu Sep 24 1987 13:42 | 31 |
| re .111
Geez, you too! They used to march us down to the nurses office
in groups to take hearing and eyesight tests. For the hearing tests
the nurse put earphones on about 8 kids at a time, then made beeps
on the machine that controlled the earphones. You were supposed
to raise your hand whenever you heard a sound. When you are in
first or second grade you'd better believe that you don't want to
be the only one not raising your hand, even if you didn't hear
anything.
I also thought that the eyesight charts were a test of skill. Two
or three people would take the test ahead of me, so I had it memorized
by the time it was my turn, even though I could only read the first
two lines (the real huge letters). I didn't find out that people
were actually supposed to see the blackboard clearly until the girl
in front of me got glasses in the 4th grade. I tried them on, and
voila! I could actually see the pretty picture the teacher had
drawn on the board, and all the separate little chalk marks. I
was amazed. The teacher saw me try them on and told me to take
them off since I would ruin my eyes. I wasn't one to argue, but
that night I told my mom that I needed glasses. She passed it off
as me just wanting a pair like Carol, but I pestered her and pestered
her until she took me to the eye doctor. The eye doctor used a
different chart than my school and there was no one reading it off
ahead of me so I "flunked" miserably. When I got the pair of glasses
and first went outside I couldn't believe that you could actually
see the separate leaves on the trees. I was swinging my head around
this way and that trying to take it all in, what a difference!
Barbara b.
|
452.113 | Sharp vision | STUBBI::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Sep 24 1987 13:45 | 7 |
| re .111 and .112
Me also! I still remember getting my first pair of glasses in
about 4th or 5th grade and being absolutely fascinated by looking
at all the details of the branches and leaves on the tops of
the trees.
Bonnie
|
452.114 | digression and misconception | ARGUS::CORWIN | I don't care if I AM a lemming | Thu Sep 24 1987 14:25 | 24 |
| re last few and vision problems:
My eyes are really strange. My left eye is VERY nearsighted (if they didn't
make the top line an E all the time, I couldn't read it!) and my right eye
is a tiny bit farsighted. So, I can see "fine" without glasses (even
passed the MA driver's eye test 2 weeks ago, since they test both eyes at
once) but what's depth perception? I think I finally realized why I couldn't
deal with a frisbee coming right at me! I recently got one contact lens
(hadn't been wearing my glasses for a long time) and am still closing my
right eye to "play" with my vision.
And now, back to the topic of misconceptions:
When I was in elementary school, I used to think there were just 2 religions:
most people were Jewish and there were relatively few Catholics. A direct
extrapolation from my school and neighborhood (in Brooklyn, NY). Boy was I
surprised when we moved and there were 2-3 Jewish children in the school!!
And my favorite: I used to think your "half birthday" was in the month that
your brother or sister's birthday was in. I have one sister with an April
birthday, and mine's in October, so we know where that comes from! I could
never figure out how it worked if you had more than one sibling!!
Jill
|
452.115 | not just for the young | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Sep 24 1987 14:27 | 10 |
|
Well, I'll tell you, the fascination with the separate leaves held
true for me when I was 18! My nearsightedness came on very slowly,
I think -- I don't remember having any problems with my sight as
a kid -- and I realised I needed glasses the day I saw my sister-in-law
walking down the street towards me, and though I knew it was her,
because of her peculiar gait, and her tall, thin body, I could _not_
focus on her face. Individual blades of grass where fascinating, too!
CQ
|
452.116 | giant lizards & talking horse | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Thu Sep 24 1987 14:34 | 15 |
|
I just remembered something else... this didn't happen to me, but to
my ex-husband, who is deaf. When he was a kid, he watched some
amount of TV. Ya know how they made those old monster-movies, where
the monster was a lizard enlarged x times? He saw those movies
and thought that all lizards would grow into monsters, if you didn't
kill them first, so he used to patrol around with a 2x4, killing the
little ones that scurried around his childhood home in the south.
Also, he used to watch Mr.Ed, and it wasn't till he was in school that
a teacher told him that horses couldn't really talk. He had no one to
answer his questions and tell him what was what. It really made me sad
to hear it...
CQ
|
452.117 | My childhood crazies! | SSDEVO::HILLIGRASS | | Thu Sep 24 1987 18:14 | 27 |
|
As a child I thought women got pregnant by going number 1
in the same toilet as a man who hadn't flushed, so I always
flushed before I went.
I thought that bands were playing in the radio stations and
what we heard on the radio was live. I couldn't figure out
how they changed so fast.
I thought the "Chipmunks" were real singing squirrels.
My Lords prayer went "Our Father, who arts in heaven, halloween
be thy name...........". My vision of god was a painting pumpkin.
I thought relatives younger than me were cousins and older than
me were aunts, uncles, and grandparents.
I thought clouds were soft, and quiet....until I flew in my first
plain ride through one.
My worst nighttime fear was that I could not hang any of my arms or legs
over the side of the bed because there was someone with a knife
circling under my bed constantly.
Don't laugh too hard! :^)
- Sue
|
452.118 | | AURA::GLIDEWELL | | Thu Sep 24 1987 20:55 | 13 |
| O--O
4th grade, I remember the eye doctor and nurse exchanging Looks after she
said "read the first letter" and I asked "where?".
And I felt totally DUMB compared to all the seafarers and ancient
astronomers who plotted the paths of the stars. I could never have done
that! Heck, I couldn't tell one from another. I spent my first night with
glasses laying on a hillside, open mouthed, staring at Individual Stars. Wow.
Never did homework from grade 2 thru 4. It was written on the board, as
visible to me as the Great Wall of China. Can't imagine what my teachers
thought.
|
452.119 | Letters? On the board? | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Thu Sep 24 1987 23:10 | 18 |
| I've felt kinda left out in this note 'cause either I have
a terrible memory or I had few if any delusions as a kid
(or at least few that I have since lost).
However, at 36 as I walk in to work on a criss clear day, I
still admire the fine detail of the individual leaves and
branches at the tops of trees. In 6th grade I used to get
headaches all the time from the eyestrain of reading the black
board. Eventually, I answered "But you didn't write anything"
or somethig similar when asked to read the board.
A few years later I learned a valuable lesson: Don't buy your
first pair of bifocals from someone whose office is at the top
of the stairs. It hurts when the stairs leap out of your way.
Back to the mythconceptions...
JimB.
|
452.120 | *lean forwards* can't quite see... | ECLAIR::GOODWIN | Get up and go for it! | Fri Sep 25 1987 09:02 | 13 |
| I used to think babies were made when a man and woman kissed...god
knows where I got that idea from!
Uh, I didn't know I was shortsighted until I joined DEC (woops!).
My first eye test since school. I struggled to read more than four
lines. The first time I wore them, I wandered down the high street
in the evening. All those signs I could read! Gollee! People's faces
were in focus...what a revelation.
So now I get comments like, "C'mon Pete, stop being vain and wear
your glasses!" when I go to lunch and try to spot people.
Pete.
|
452.121 | | JUNIOR::TASSONE | Cruise Nov 9 -16 | Fri Sep 25 1987 16:15 | 20 |
| I still do this. In referring to places that I will travel, from
a Mass. perspective, you drive UP to New Hampshire and you drive
DOWN to Connecticut. And when I lived in Milford and my sister
lived in Marlboro, she would say, "why don't you come on down" and
I would say, "no, up". How silly.
I also thought the same thing about swallowing seeds (watermelon).
But, I was different: I showed off by swallowing them. My mother
used to get angry at me for that. Guess who had the last laugh
when I swallowed a very large peach stone? I was not a happy camper.
My mother told a small fib EVERY time she went to clip my sister's
and my fingernails and toe nails. She said, "we use them in pea
soup". You can laugh because that is such a stupid reason, yet,
I believed her.
Were any of you excited about the solar eclipse and when your mother
and father told you not to look at the sun, you did anyways?
Cathy
|
452.122 | rivers flow down | CADSYS::SULLIVAN | Karen - 225-4096 | Fri Sep 25 1987 18:23 | 8 |
| RE: north being up
I lived in Rochester N.Y. where the Genesee River flowed north
towards Lake Ontario. I'll never forget the time in 3rd grade
when one of my classmates told the teacher that it was impossible
for the river to flow up like that.
...Karen
|
452.123 | Free kittens in the Spring | MARCIE::JLAMOTTE | AAY-UH | Fri Sep 25 1987 19:14 | 5 |
| I was told if I put a pussy willow branch in the closet kittens
would be born from the furry flowers.
I tried and tried and tried and it didn't work....I must have done
something wrong...I will try again next spring.
|
452.124 | Down East? | HUMAN::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Fri Sep 25 1987 21:46 | 22 |
| For those of you who may have been confused by us New Englanders
and our references to "down east", and Maine being "down" from
Massachusetts, the following explanation may be in order.
It is pretty common to refer to the direction that a river flows
or a wind blows as "down". Louisiana is "down river" from Ohio,
say. Well, the early New Engalnders were fisherman and dependant
on fishing and shipping for their trade, so they just naturally
thought in nautical terms, and relative to one of the largest
river in the world--the Gulf Stream--Maine is down and east from
the rest of Massachusetts and New England (remembering all the
time that Maine was a part of Massachusetts for nearly half its
history).
So whereas Maine would appear to be "up north" to those of us
who look at modern maps, to our New Engalnd ancestors it's
"down" and "east". Wasn't that simple and obvious?
Actually, the above is all a foul lie. we really use weird
phrases like "down east" for the same reason that we never put
street signs marking our main streets--its to confuse all you
foreigners and recent arrivals.
|
452.125 | You Are My Sunshine | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Mon Sep 28 1987 13:19 | 25 |
| I have been waiting and waiting for something from my childhood
to hit me that I could share with you folks as my misconception.
Yesterday I remembered:
My grandmother and her sister used to sing songs with me all of
the time. One day I was visiting this great aunt at her home in
Missouri (I lived in California), and I requested that we sing that
song we always sang.
"Which song?" they asked.
"The one about the nail in the head", I replied.
They could not imagine what I was talking about.
We used to sing "You are my Sunshine", and the second verse went
like this:
"The other night, dear, as I lay sleeping, I dreamed I held you
in my arms.
When I awoke, dear, I was mistaken, and I hung my head and I cried."
I didn't know what hanging one's head was, but I figured it was
like you hung a coat: on a nail. :-)
Carol
|
452.126 | Do these folks understand child psychology? | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Mon Sep 28 1987 17:54 | 24 |
| OH yes, eye tests in school.
I too thought that they were tests of skill. Gee, it was easy to
memorize those letters :^).
Until I was in 6th grade, I got in line first. I couldn't fake
it then, and read the top 2 lines of the chart. Then my parents
took me to an optometrists at a department store, who either the
tester or the shop did a bad job of fitting me with glasses, which
did not make things any better for me. I didn't realize that there
was a problem until the next year - when they took me to a teaching
hospital, and got the glasses made right. Gee, I could see the
stars, and the trees, and the lines in my hands (I had far-sighted
astigmatism). It was truly amazing. I never realized that you
were supposed to see the writing on the board, or the writing in
books clearly - I thought they had cleverly made it as small as
people could *possibly* see it just to save paper.
You'd think that school nurses would know as much about child
psychology as those who read this file, and take the children in
*one* at a time, so they wouldn't treat it as a test of skill, like
their other tests.
Elizabeth
|
452.127 | Same story here! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Sep 29 1987 11:44 | 26 |
| I don't think I ever did pass an eye test at school, even after
I got glasses - their machine that you had to look into didn't do
a very good job for very near-sighted people. I remember one year
at summer camp trying on a friend's glasses, and being really surprised
that I could see the indidivual leaves at the tops of the trees
- I knew they were up there (it was a nature camp, after all!),
but I didn't realize anyone could see them. So of course the counselor
said to give Joan back her glasses before they ruined my eyes.
Anyhow, I got my own glasses soon after, and what an improvement!
I especially remember the French teacher in my grade school using
a feltboard - a fuzzy board where she could stick velcro-backed
tiny figures of "le grandpere", "le chat", etc. - none of which
I could make out at all. I used to go up and look at the feltboard
after class so I could see what the things looked like so that I
could identify them by color from my own seat (always in the back
corner of the room, since we were always arranged by height - not
the right spot for tall nearsighted kids) -- luckily they were mostly
different enough that you could do this. That way, I could also
find out that the brown blob that Madame Soutense called "le chien"
was a little figure of a floppy-eared dog, maybe two inches high
(I wonder how many of the kids who weren't nearsighted could see
these tiny objects well enough to actually see that this thing was
supposed to be a dog? They were pretty little!). No, I was NEVER
EVER going to admit that I couldn't see the things...little kids
don't like to be singled out, because it causes the other kids to
tease them (most children have no tact!).
|
452.128 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | the edge of reality | Tue Sep 29 1987 14:01 | 10 |
| Re people getting glasses, my brother finally got glasses in 7th
grade. I can remember him looking in the mirror and being dismayed
and saying, "I didn't know I had this many pimples!" He had a terrible
acne problem as a teenager, but he didn't know about it til he got
glasses, poor kid. I can also remember him saying, "Everything
outside looks so clear and distinct!" I never realized before how
many other kids this happened to.
Lorna
|
452.129 | OOPPS | IMAGIN::KOLBE | Stuck in the middle again | Fri Oct 02 1987 18:53 | 8 |
| < Note 452.125 by CSC32::JOHNS "Yes, I *am* pregnant :-)" >
Carol, your personal name reminds of a rule my girlfriends and I
made up after asking someone who WASN'T pregnant if they were.
NEVER mention pregnancy until you're sure it's not just extra
weight - that's one mistake I won't make again. liesl
|
452.130 | | TOPDOC::GLIDEWELL | | Wed Oct 07 1987 19:32 | 9 |
| Just heard one from a new acquaintance.
Her neice grew up in Oklahoma, where she often visited the water
slide park that included wave pools. She came to Boston to visit
relatives at seven, and she and her cousins went to the ocean beach.
After a few hours of playing in the ocean surf, she came back to
her aunt and said "This is wonderful! What time do they turn off
the waves?"
Meigs
|
452.131 | So THAT'S how you get pregnant! | CSC32::JOHNS | Yes, I *am* pregnant :-) | Mon Oct 12 1987 15:55 | 12 |
| I just heard a new one, too, from a DC friend. She said that when
she was about 8 her mother was pregnant and was on prenatal vitamins.
One day before the birth her grandmother came to visit and reached up
into the cupboard to get a vitamin. My friend very gravely informed
grandma that she shouldn't take THOSE pills, that if she did then
she would have a baby.
When that baby was born she was named Betsy. When Betsy was little
she went to church and everybody stood up to sing. Of course, so
did Betsy, in her high voice, sing the only song she knew...
"Davy, Davy Crockett..."
Carol
|
452.132 | | VCQUAL::THOMPSON | Noter at large | Mon Oct 12 1987 15:43 | 5 |
| My son's nickname is AC (from his initials). When he was very
little he thought AC was a generic term for a child. Didn't
everyone have their own AC, he once asked.
Alfred
|
452.133 | Don't kiss me on the lips! | YODA::HOPKINS | | Tue Oct 13 1987 12:16 | 4 |
| While visiting my family a few weeks ago, I gave my 5 year old nephew
a kiss on the lips. He went running to my sister (his Mother)
screaming, "Oh, no...I don't want to have a baby".
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452.134 | Pasteur revisited | PARITY::TILLSON | If it don't tilt, fergit it! | Wed Oct 14 1987 13:42 | 15 |
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When I was about four years old, I got the measles. I was all covered
with red dots. My mother told me I couldn't play with the other
children in the neighborhood because I had germs.
When all the red spots were gone, she declared me germ-free and
said I could play with my friends again.
When the neighborhood children came over, I warned them. I told
them if they saw any little red dots on my toys, they shouldn't touch
them. Those little red spots were germs, and *I* didn't have them
any more, so they must have gone *somewhere* :-)
Rita
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452.135 | poor medicine? | YAZOO::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Wed Oct 14 1987 14:18 | 3 |
| My ten year old daughter was reading the label on her amoxicillan
this morning and interpreted the no refill to mean no relief so
she asked me why she was bothering to take the stuff.
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452.136 | I *don't* need glasses | YODA::BARANSKI | Law?!? Hell! Give me *Justice*! | Fri Oct 16 1987 15:05 | 14 |
| I was very stubborn when I got my first glasses. I took the eye test, but
nobody bothered to inform me how much you were *supposed* to read. I was just
told "You need glasses". Like any redblooded American child, I promptly said,
"No I don't".
Then I went to get my glasses in a mall. I didn't have any memory of not being
able to see like with glasses on, so when I put the glasses on, and could see,
and then took the glasses off, and couldn't see, I had a big fit, and told
everyone that the glasses had ruined my eyes.
I guess I must have heard that if you wear someone elses glasses, you ill ruin
your eyes, eh?
Jim.
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452.137 | This Topic is Really Funny | PVAX::MCDONOUGH | | Wed Nov 25 1987 13:48 | 17 |
| For New Englanders: When I was little I was always afraid when
we were going to Cape Cod. I was convinced we had to drive over
the TOP of the bridges. Why else was all that tall metal stuff
there?
My husband is pretty silly, and is filling our two children with
misconceptions. Once he told them that when a cucumber gets
pregnant it becomes a watermelon. He also told them that the
little boat being towed behind bigger boats is the "money boat".
It costs so much to have a boat that the people have to drag
the extra money with them. For years the children stood at the
side of the Cape Cod canal straining to see the money inside.
Then last night, we were singing Oh, Susanna when my daughter was
surprised that he had a banjo on his knee. She had thought it
was a bandaid on his knee.
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452.138 | | CADSE::GLIDEWELL | | Thu Dec 10 1987 19:55 | 10 |
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An older brother used to soak in the tub for hours at a time. One day,
he came home from work, sore as heck, and said he had a carbuncle on
his tailbone.
My little brother was astonished, and ran around the neighborhood
telling everyone his big brother had spent too long sitting in the
bathtub and now had barnacles.
Meigs
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