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When We Were Free to be Kids

09/24/03

My son asked an interesting question during the endless summer that ended this week: “Pop, when you were a kid, what did you do in the summer?”

How do you tell a 7-year-old who has almost everything that it was better way back when without almost anything? That we perfected the art of doing nothing for months on end--and loved every hour?

How do you explain we enjoyed ourselves without Gameboys, Playstations, computers, TVs in cars, and portable cd-players? That journeys of exploration and adventure did not include a hand-held device on a sofa? That off-limit swimming holes were better than swimming pools in the backyards of homes we would have considered mansions available only in dreams?

Can he possibly comprehend that when we left the house at 7:00 a.m. in cutoffs and a T-shirt, mom never asked where we were going? That catching pond frogs and building tree houses with rope swings was better than having 6,271 TV channels? That staying out all day and doing whatever we wanted was (gasp!) normal? That our summons home was the street lights popping on and not a call on a cell phone?

Would he believe that we hoofed around town or rode our bikes (spray painted cool colors) with friends seated between the handle bars, holding on for dear life while trying to keep their toes out of the spokes? Or that those same spokes made the coolest “tat-tat-tat” sound if you attached a playing card with a clothespin? That no one had heard of a bicycle helmet, and that we would not have been caught dead in one anyway?

That digging for night crawlers so we could fish in a muddy creek for bullhead with a bamboo pole and a red and white bobber (with your brother yelling at you for tangling his line) beat the pants off sitting in an air conditioned house playing Nintendo?

Can you imagine the damage I might inflict on the psyche of a modern-day El Dorado Hills child if I told him our idea of pure drinking water was letting a garden hose in a stranger’s back yard run for several seconds before taking a sip? Or that “organic food” was eating Mr. Weydert’s corn raw off the cob before washing it down with milk straight from the cow?

That nothing was more fun than a round-trip sneak attack on Mr. Bogart’s apple tree, hiding amongst his leafy branches happily munching green apples, and stuffing another half dozen in our pockets while planning our getaway? That spine-tingling terror could be had by crawling on our hands and knees into old lady Taylor’s backyard (we thought she was a witch), pushing aside a piece of slate, dropping a rock into her well, and being brave enough to stay put long enough to hear the splash?

Today, kids can’t play in their own front yard without adult supervision. We played king of the hill on the large dirt and rock piles left in someone’s driveway blocks away on Pennsylvania Avenue. When we got hurt, we went home for a band aid and iodine (and a spanking) instead of to the lawyer’s office with dad to sue the homeowner.

Can today’s children conceive that we waged war from behind stacked up Culligan salt bags with REAL WWII rifles our dads brought home from Europe or the Pacific, decked out in authentic helmets and canteens--and it was more fun than playing Age of Empires or Rise of Nations on a PC over the Internet with a stranger? Would they believe that every 9-year-old had a BB gun, and responsible use was defined as shooting cans off a fence or an egg-stealing black bird--but never a robin?

Or that sleep overs meant Jiffypop popcorn on the stove (burned black), kick the can in the back yard, and (if you were lucky) a scoop of vanilla ice cream with Hershey’s syrup. Bed time meant squeezing into the hot top bunk with your buddy while his two brothers crammed into the bottom bunk?

How could I explain all this in a way that makes sense?

“Long ago,” I began . . .

“You mean in the Olden Days?” my son interrupted.

“Yes, way back when,” I said.

“When what?” he asked.

“When we were free to be kids.”


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