I sometimes think about how different my childhood would seem to children today. Computers and electronic toys such as Wii, Xbox or Playstation didn’t exist when my siblings and I were small. How did we ever manage?(Claudia below with an enormous Patty Play-Pal doll.)
I remember we had lots of dolls…and a baby pram. My mom was pregnant with our little brother, so I suppose we were very conscious of "babies." She was home with us until my brother was in school, and then she worked as long as I can remember outside of the home, as a teacher. My younger sister Claudia had a “Patty Play-Pal” doll that was just her size and sometimes even wore her clothes. My father often used to mistake her for one of us. I remember I was sort of scared of her! (Sue with doll below)
Our Uncle Con gave us gifts we’d get excited about: I remember having a Cinderella watch I was thrilled with… (Sue and Mary Kate displaying our new watches from Uncle Con, before we even knew how to tell time)
And we had a toy piano and a work bench and pegboard that got lots of use. We loved our tricycles from him... (Sue and bike below)
and pedal cars… (Sue and pedal car below)
But more often than not, we invented things to do: we’d play dress-up, and devise our own imaginary games and activities. My mother told me once that she used to laugh that she’d hear us, all day long, saying to one another in excitement: “Let’s make-a-believe…” (Claudia as a fortune-telling gypsy, below) We loved to color and draw and paint. Our sidewalks always had hopscotch grids on them.
We were always stealing my dad and grandfather’s hats and gloves to wear…
If it was raining outside, we’d sometimes play in the basement: I remember us draping bedspreads on an overturned card table, and we’d crawl inside the "tents" we created.
My son and his friends in the neighborhood sold lemonade and had great fun with an elaborate “stand” for customers to approach. We loved selling lemonade and cookies as little kids, too. We were happy just collecting chestnuts in a paper bag and shining them up. And we went to the park, where we played tether ball, rode swings, and made things like lanyards and baskets there.
We had lots of friends, but I was fortunate that I had my own built-in playmates in my three siblings, and I never felt bored. We weren't allowed to watch TV that often, unless we asked permission, and we were encouraged, as children, to read and ride bikes and find ways to entertain ourselves. We made macaroni-glued objects and strung buttons on strings for necklaces.
"If you carry your childhood with you, you never become older." ( ~Tom Stoppard)




14 comments:
Ah, yes...the olden days, as my Grade 4 class call them.
Older than you and growing up in New Zealand, there was no TV, but we amused ourselves with no trouble.
If only we'd understood patents we could have registered our prototype skateboard - box planks strapped to the two skates of one pair so that we didn't have to wait so long for a turn!
Much that I wouldn't go back for, but much more that I am glad I knew.
I loved this blog and feel much the way you do. Poor children today who are rushed around from one mind-enriching activity to another, all so structured. We just played day in and day out. Dress ups was my favourite.My friends and I acted out the stories of our favourite books and each time we got together we would just pick up where we left off. I must say my two girls, growing up for 5 years in Namibia (Africa) also had a carefree, unstructured and imaginative childhood. Have a lovely day. Eleanor
Great post. I thought you raided my photo album. How lucky we are to look back and smile!
Oh yes TV was new when I was a child and not much on it really so we had to learn to entertain ourselves. well I did as an only child. I played with dolls and my dog and rode my bike and did the make believe with myself. In one house I had a friend who lived next door and we played store. We would set up real.. empty boxes.. store things and play owner and shopper. We had a lemonaide stand. No electronic anything. I think it was a better & more innocent childhood that many kids don't get these days. Very good post. Love all the photos. :))
Oh.. we lived in the mountains of CA and didnt have cable then so we only had a couple stations we could watch on top of it. But I did have a little box record player that played 45's and loved my music. I keep thinking of things. You've got me going down memory lane this morning. lol
You've got me going down memory lane too...
Love your collection of old family photos Sue! These are priceless. I was very big on my dolls and even paperdolls. Plus my dollhouse..boy did I love to go shopping for that dollhouse. I still have a garbage pale and yellow and red sewing machine with a working treadle.
Oh well at least I didn't spin wool like the Puritans...
I don't go back that far :)
What a lovely stroll down childhood memory lane. I share many of your memories, in fact I think I had the same doll as your first photo!
I do think that our childhoods were more innocent and gave more reign to imagination, than the childhoods of today. The entertainment giants want to orchestrate and manufacture imagination and sell it to our kids in the form of movies, cartoons, tv shows, video games, and 1001 electronic doodad gizmos. It's all for their profit. And instead of enriching our kids imagination, it robs them of their very own. With kids, fancy is not necessary. Simple is best. Always was and always will be.
What a beautiful reminiscing that was. And I'm certainly impressed that you have so many wonderful photographs (visual aids, aren't they?) at hand.
OOOOOOOooooH Sue, I'm so glad I stopped by... I saw my old friend "Patty" on your flickr---such memories! Love your flowery vase painting and what great quotes... especially the one at the top! I bet your sister and brothers love to read YOUR blog.
What fun to read all your comments! I grew up in war and post-war Belgium and there was very little money for toys. I cherished my 12 colored pencils more than anything. My mother had a collection of storybooks from her childhood and I made illustrations for my favorite stories. I also had a "baby " with a celluloid head and eyes that closed and spent hours feeding, rocking and carrying him around. I loved puzzles and card games. In summer I visited with my cousins in the country and I would collect insects, bones, twigs, leaves and who knows what else. We would make a museum with all of our treasures displayed in a diorama made of shoe boxes. We wrote notes, copied from the dictionary for each display and charged the grown-ups a few cents which were later spent on candy.
I don't ever remember being bored!
You know, we didn't have all those fancy tech toys, but we were a heck of a lot more creative, weren't we? I had a tricycle just like yours...was yours red, too? I should post a pic of me on it sometime. This was a great post! You are lucky to have so many pix from your childhood!
Your thoughts on today's childhood resonates with me,too. And your story about Grandma playing school remdinds me of the time my own mother was sitting for her only granddaughter, Julie, while making her famous "Banana Breeze" dessert for a family dinner. Julie was agressively drilling Grandma on math problems, so agressively in fact that Grandma forgot to put the BANANAS in the Breeze. She never heard the end of it.
Thanks, all. I do hope kids today wind up with good memories when they're older--sometimes I think their lives are so insanely busy and intense...
I love the quote about it never being to late; I hope it's true. What wonderful photos you have--I really enjoy them. I always thought "kids today" wanted too much stuff and were spoiled by it all; then, one day, I said to Peter, We didn't want stuff, because there was no stuff to want! No cell phones and video games and such. I had roller skates, and a microscope, and lots of dolls! But I do think kids spend so much time texting or on MySpace, so focused on their social world, when they could be reading or doing something, dare I say it, "constructive."
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