When I was a kid, Santa always paid a visit live in person on Chrismas Eve, before he started his rounds in his sleigh. He'd burst in the front door and give each of us three kids a present. Years later we found out that a group of dads in our neighbourhood rented suits and went to every house for a visit. If the parents wanted a Santa visit they would leave the gifts and a quarter (to help defray the cost of the suits) in the milk chute. Remember those? Back in the day when the milkman delivered door to door, there was a small door on the side of the house that opened from both the outside and inside so the milkman could leave the milk and you could retrieve it without it being left outside...but I digress.
One year (I think I was about 5 years old) Christmas Eve Santa brought me a Lady and the Tramp colouring book. Oh man, I loved that colouring book and was so careful colouring everything perfectly...Lady's fur light brown, her ears dark brown. Every page was a work of 5 year old art.
When I was probably 8 or 9 years old I got a microscope. Anything and everything I could get my hands on went on a slide for my inspection. No insect was safe within 10 feet of me. But the absolute best part of the microscope kit? A jar with a dead frog in formaldehyde. I'm pretty sure that's no longer standard issue. I removed the frog's eyes and, after studying them under the microscope, kept them wrapped in a tissue in my pocket. I'd go up to other kids on the playground and whisper, "Pssst....wanna see some frog eyes?" I'm thinking now if I hadn't gone into law enforcement a career as a drug dealer or selling fake watches from the inside of a trench coat might have been in my future.
And when it came time to dissect frogs in grade 11 biology and everyone else was totally grossed out? Well, let's just say I was an old hand at it.
Ahhh...Christmas memories.
You and your microscope would have had a hay day during the Great Pollywog Debacle of '68. I took my "bucket 'o' polliwogs" to school for show and tell...only to drop them on the way home. They all developed serious skin diseases and died. Do polliwogs have skin?? Anyway...lots to look at under that microscope.
ReplyDeleteWhat about your greatest NOT gift? I always wanted an Easy Bake Oven and never got it...I think it's the reason that cooking has never been a passion. My brother always talked about his big Tonka Truck that he never got. Guess we're 'glass half empty' folks when it comes to the holidays!
I never had an Easy Bake Oven either but the kid did. I can tell you from personal experience that your parents were in survival mode when they failed to fulfill your holiday dream --'cause they knew they'd have to eat the crap that comes out of those things.
ReplyDeleteMy greatest NOT gift didn't come until adulthood -- I am yet to find Johnny Depp under my Christmas tree. But I remain hopeful!
I hear he hangs around the Camino in the early fall....
ReplyDeleteThen there's hope yet....
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