Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Tag: childhood (Page 2 of 3)

Day 247: where the wild things were

I’ll make this short because I have to go to bed early because I plan to wake up super early tomorrow in order to drive to the beach and eat pumpkin pancakes.

I went and saw Where the Wild Things Are tonight.  It was good.  It was an odd film, as it took a book that can be read in 5 minutes and turned it into a 90+ minute feature film.

It was a strange emotional journey.  I laughed, I cried, and I’m still not completely sure why I did either.  It’s emotional, but I’m not sure why.  It managed to pull me in two completely opposite directions: into the role of a father-to-be and into the memories of childhood.

It was thoroughly enjoyable and I would heartily recommend it, but I feel a bit tongue-tied about actually describing what I liked about it.  Just go see it, I guess.  Then we can meet and discuss it by eating yogurt and toppings while nodding silently at each other.

Day 243: cheating

It was bound to happen.  Today, I didn’t get to a computer before midnight.  I thought about turning back the clock on my blog post, pretending that it had been posted before the clock struck 12, but that’d be deceptive and unnecessary.  After all, this experiment, this writing project is really about writing one short entry each day.  And a day starts when I get out of bed and ends when I get back into it.

Midnight is just a scientific construct to demarcate what society considers a day.  So, it’s no big deal that I missed the midnight “deadline,” right?  Besides, setting the clock to a time other than the actual time I wrote the post would be cheating.  No one might ever know about it or find out, but it would reside in my heart as a shameful mark in this yearlong write-a-thon.

I don’t remember ever having cheated in school, although I don’t know if this is actually something extraordinary or not.  I always thought that there must be schoolmates of mine that did cheat (in ways both large and small), but I would be hard-pressed to come up with any actual percentage.

And what constitutes cheating?  Besides the obvious infractions of secretly getting test answers early or copying off of another student, where is the line drawn?

When I was younger, it wasn’t always be clear when working with other students was mere collaboration, and when it had turned into something more sinister.  Likewise with that naughty p-word: plagiarism.

Sure, copying direct passages from a library book into your paper was obviously wrong.  But what about rephrasing an idea that wasn’t originally yours?  What about letting a book do the critical thinking on a situation for you?

Of course, you don’t really think about this when you’re a kid.  Not that much, anyway.  As an adult, you realize that cheating surrounds you.  It’s not just restricted to those classroom questions of morality.  It’s about whether or not you eat that extra donut, whether or not you go to sleep when you told yourself you would, what you write in your self evaluation.

So, I’m not perfect.  I don’t always turn off my console after just one more level.  I don’t always wake up in time to do the chores I said I’d do the night before.  But you have to draw the line somewhere.  And forging blog post times to make it look like you wrote something before midnight?  That’s just fucked up.

Day 191: cold heat

When I was young, I used to think that I was better in cold weather than in hot. When it was cold, I didn’t feel it as much. On the flip side, when it was hot, I would feel helpless, tired, and much more out of sorts.

As I’ve grown, I think I’ve changed slightly. I think my tolerance for cold has gotten slightly worse and my tolerance for hot weather slightly better. Perhaps it was youthful ignorance or a stubborn will, but I distinctly remember it being colder but not feeling as cold.

Is this a transformation that other people go through, although perhaps the other direction? Do certain people grow up liking cold temperature only to not be able to stand it in their old age? Do people feel heat and cold differently at different ages?

Or is it more a matter of environment? Does growing up somewhere cold mean that eventually you’ll get more used to it and more immune to it?

Day 186: 80s tv, or the lack thereof

Sometimes, I wonder what I did as a child.  I mean, except for memorize multiplication tables.

I certainly didn’t indulge in television watching – I was too busy doing homework!  And chatting up babes on the Internet.  Kate rattled off a long string of 80s television shows, of which I had watched probably less than 10% of.

I don’t remember watching any episodes of classics like Who’s the Boss, Family Ties, or Charles in Charge.  I remember seeing tidbits of long-running series like Cheers or MASH.  Really, the only shows in my childhood I can lay claim to are those from the TGIF block: Step by Step, Family Matters, and Boy Meets World.

Aside from that, it seems that I missed out on a lot of television nostalgia that others in my generation have.  Katie also remembers a show about a little girl that was a robot called Small Wonder.

I had never heard of it, but I think that my position is the majority here.  Has anyone heard of Small Wonder?  Wikipedia says that it was considered by TV Guide and the BBC to be one of the worst sitcoms ever.

Taking sample SAT tests may have actually been more fun than watching that.  And believe me – I took a lot of those as a kid.

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