Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Tag: childhood (Page 3 of 3)

Day 162: monkey king

I have a thing for the monkey king.

monkey-god11

Part of it is because he’s one of the early superheroes I remember from my Chinese youth.  Much like young American children were excited about Superman or Batman’s next adventure, I still have a graphic novel of the monkey king from my youth, even though it’s entirely in Chinese and I can’t read any of it anymore.  Imagine if instead of the Marvel and DC universe, your pantheon of superheroes was limited to essentially one major character.

I dressed as the monkey king one year for Halloween, even though I had to explain it to everyone I ran into.

I went and saw the mediocre children’s movie The Forbidden Kingdom last year because it had the monkey king as part of its main storyline.

I bought the relatively good graphic novel American Born Chinese after flipping through the first few pages and seeing references to the monkey king.

It’s one of the few Chinese childhood things that I distinctly remember.  There’s one especially vivid memory I have of riding in the back of my parents car, reading a monkey king comic.  I started feeling extremely nauseous and eventually barfed on my book.  I was very upset and loved the book so much that I didn’t want to throw it away, despite the fact (or perhaps my childhood mind couldn’t process) that the book was soaked and would always smell a bit like vomit.

That’s the power the monkey king had (and still has) over me.

Day 140: money pigs

Being a kid is like having a time machine when it comes to money.  There’s a certain wonderful naiveté that accompanies the age when you think of $20 as a “lot of money.”

The biggest physical manifestation of this childhood time when money is worth more is the piggy bank.  It certainly requires a bit of self-control, but saving all of the money that belongs to you in a small pig and being proud is a feeling that is hard to reacquire once you actually have a salary and bank account.

Katie and I keep a pig that we keep leftover change in, but in terms of actual amount of savings, it pales in comparison to our bank accounts.  It does have something that the rest of our accounts lack: a presence.

A piggy bank is there, in your home, on your counter or end table.  Saving money is accompanied by a satisfying little clink and the gradual additional weight and heft that the pig attains.  And although the money is hidden behind a veneer of porcelain or plastic, it is never actually out of reach.  It never requires a trip to the local ATM or signing a small slip of paper.

It harkens back to a simpler time, when people kept all of their money in a sock under the mattress, when you saved up for a particularly cool toy instead of whipping out a plastic card, when a $5 tip seemed like the utmost extravagance.

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