For fun, I made crafts that I found in a volume of our Children's Encyclopedia or elsewhere. I mixed flour and water together to make dough. I made sun pictures. (Put shapes on construction paper and then put the paper in the sun. The sun fades the exposed construction paper and leaves the parts you covered the original color.) My sister and I melted crayon wax into bottlecaps to make gliders for a street game called Skully. (Wikipedia has a page for this game, I can't believe it! Apparently, it's regional to New York.) I used sidewalk chalk to make hop scotch boards. I jumped rope, and played handball against the side of the house. I collected leaves. Whenever I was bored, I knew it was up to me to get un-bored. Luckily, adventure was as close as the public library or the stack of books in my room. My sister and I got along well and entertained each other. We also visited our friends' houses and went for pizza in the neighborhood.
I didn't have cable, a cell phone, the internet, or an iPod. For school papers, I looked stuff up in the good old Collier's Encyclopedia. My mother often helped me type up my reports on a heavy electric typewriter we kept on a rolling metal table. If you look at the way children grow up now, it's a lot different. When my niece is bored, she goes on the computer and plays the games on the Nickelodeon website. If her TV shows aren't on for some reason, my sister can find play a DVD of her favorite series or turn to On Demand. When I was young, I was at the mercy of the television schedule. When The Price is Right was over at noon, The Young and the Restless came on, and that meant there was nothing on until Little House on the Prairie at 5:00. I'd walk to the television set (no remotes, you see) and turn it off for a few hours.
You might be thinking at this point that I'm about to get to a place where I say kids have it so easy today, but I'm not. Or you might think I'm going to declare how much better it was back then because it was a simpler time. I'm not saying that either, necessarily. What I am saying is that a childhood, whether spent playing skully, World of Warcraft, or tiddlywinks, is a special time. It shapes you in ways that are difficult to quantify. I still think Play Doh is pretty cool. I still like to do crafts, only now I get my ideas off the internet. I still turn off the TV in the middle of the day--a long holdout from the days when Soap Operas were all that the networks played between 12 and 5. If I see a hopscotch board drawn on the sidewalk in my neighborhood, I WILL jump and hop my way through it. Future Video has been replaced with the much more convenient and forgiving Netflix, and VHS has become DVD (and probably soon, BluRay). Reading is still one of my favorite activities, although if I want to own a book, I buy it online from Amazon or Barnes and Noble.
My childhood was very low-tech compared to the childhoods happening now, but that's okay. It was a rich childhood regardless. I don't begrudge today's kids their online encyclopedias or texting or DVDs of their favorite shows. I won't say I'm a better person for having had less technology when I was growing up, but I will say it's helped me to appreciate what I have now even more. And far from making me feel further away from my past, the internet can help me experience parts of my childhood again. I can buy the Weeble's Treehouse on eBay. I can watch old commercials on YouTube. For this blog, I wanted to find out the correct spelling of "skully," so I Googled it, and found Wikipedia has a page dedicated to it, a chain of events that made me incredibly giddy. In writing this blog, I am using the internet to do something else I enjoy: reminiscing about the "old days."
But that's enough of a stroll down memory lane for now. Or is it? Excuse me while I go search on eBay for that metal BeeGees lunchbox I used to carry around in kindergarten.
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