• Memories

    Like family

    While growing up, our family was super close to another family. This friendship went back to my babyhood when my parents lived in the same building as their parents. The dads worked at the same company and were best friends for many years. When one moved to Atlanta, the other soon followed and our families were close all the years I was growing up. At this point, our lives diverged quite a lot and we saw less and less of each other. The last time I saw them was at my wedding over 25 years ago. But I consider them close friends despite the distance and time away. The dad in the family died yesterday and I’m feeling pretty gutted about it. This is hitting me harder than losing some family has been.

    I talked to my mom tonight and while talking I also discovered another mutual friend had died some time ago. She was ten years older than me and lived across the street. She was our babysitter and at times she had all six of us kids together at once and loved it. She often spent more money on us than she earned. The last time I saw her was at my brother’s wedding which was a few years before my own. My parents discovered this while checking out her Facebook page and seeing an RIP message from someone going back a couple of years. It aches to know it’s been so long but we had no mutual contacts who might have alerted us to her death.

  • Daily life,  Memories

    55 1/4

    When it was my birthday in March, the Scientist had had to drop plans for a special birthday for me turning 55. It was that day that we went into lockdown and the best we could do was to bring home take away food to enjoy with the family. I had a good day anyway and life carried on.

    A few weeks ago on the Friday, the Scientist said to me we were going out the next day and I needed to be ready to go by 10am. I wasn’t too sure what that was about so I was kind of curious. On Saturday I got up and got ready to go out and we ended up driving out through a new section of highway we hadn’t used before. It was kind of neat to see it from the car. I’ve rode out that way on my bike but not so far as we went this time. We turned off to Bullsbrook and drove along another road for a few kilometres. Then we passed by this place called Outback Splash. This used to be called The Maze but they have added a water park and expanded it considerably in the past few years. Anyway, I commented that I guess our destination wasn’t Outback Splash only to be told it was where were going. It was a bit odd to pass by a place we were headed to. We turned around on another road further along and went back to our destination. Then the Scientist went right past the entrance to the parking lot and had to turn around. I later learned these were just delaying tactics. I should have been suspicious since I know he wouldn’t easily miss these turn-offs.

    Finally we were parked and went into to the entrance. But the Scientist made me wait outside for a bit while he was discussing something with staff. Finally we went through and sought out a particular “hut” (shelter) that we were aiming for. We did eventually find it and sat down at which point the Scientist did a little speech about how his plans for my birthday got ruined by covid-19 and so he was finally getting his plans into gear that day.

    So I turned around to find three of my friends from tai chi there, with presents, to celebrate my 55 1/4 birthday. From my friends I got a candle and incense burner set, a tea cup with my favorite color purple, and a metal water bottle that had the color purple too. It was all very sweet.

    Then we went off to the koala house to meet the koalas. We had special tickets to get up close and personal. The keeper took us through and set up a step ladder so we could pat the koala in approved locations and see what it was really like. This was my first time being so close to one. Decades ago when I was pregnant I had held a wombat and that was quite an experience. But these were the dozy koalas who were mostly sleeping. The one we had access to was agreeable enough for a while but after a few people had been up to see it, it moved itself to the back of the house and out of the way. Still we had a good look and I got a few photos on my phone.

    After this we returned to the hut and the Scientist went off to get a cake and the food he’d ordered for lunch. He came back with a huge tray of rolls with various fillings. It was a bit much for our small group of five so quite a few didn’t get eaten until much later.

    Then it was time for cake and on there he’d written it was my 55 1/4 birthday and he had two candles to put on the cake. But there was the issue of blowing out candles and the idea was to remove them to a plate for the blowing part. But it didn’t matter as I expected because the breeze blew it out instead. The next thing was trying to cut the cake since there was a lack of any sort of knife. One of my friends made use of the cardboard backing of the candle and that worked enough to get the pieces we needed. It was a really yummy cake, homemade with buttercream frosting and lots of chocolate and decoration.

    Special cake to celebrate my 55th birthday a few months late.

    Afterwards, the food was put away and we went off to the first of the mazes. We had been to the Maze years ago when the kids were much younger and had a good time. The hedge maze at the time wasn’t a thing yet because they were still growing it. But we could see where it would be. And it was quite a bit of fun although not particularly difficult. There were quite a few people going through and there was a natural reaction to just follow along but we did break rank and sought out our own pathways. It wasn’t long until we reached the center and stood on a platform looking over the maze. Then it was a pretty easy task to reach the end on the other side. I’m not saying it was simple but it wasn’t that challenging.

    The second maze was a tire maze and the idea was to reach a certain point by following a color progression and jump across tires. I didn’t even realise where the goal was until after I’d gone through and come back out. I tried again and it was quite difficult to get through and we gave up. It was actually kind of tiring going round and round and there were also quite a few others doing the same but it was a lot of fun to try it out.

    There was a maze/not maze with some other animals, mostly kangaroos we also visited.

    Next was a ring toss game that we all tried to play and had varying degrees of success. I managed to get one ring on the whole time. We took turns until we reach the goal on that one.

    The last maze was the main attraction, a wooden maze that had several flags you needed to reach. I remember this from our previous visit and Game Fanatic was instrumental in helping us find all the flags. This time we made it through to a couple of flags and that was okay. The third flag was also doable. But trying to get to the next one proved a bit too difficult and we ended up going in circles and not getting any closer to our target. It was around this time my bladder made its needs known and it wasn’t too much trouble to get back out of the maze. I went off to to the toilets and the others came out of the maze and that was the end of that. I’d had stuck it out had my bladder not been so insistent.

    Next we moved on to the mini golf part of the park. This was no great version of mini golf but we still had fun giving a shot. I managed to do par on one hole. The rest were kind of all over the place.

    Afterwards, one of my friends bought us ice cream and we sat at a table outside the café to eat. It was in the midst of this final treat that the music that had been playing stopped and it was clear the place was closing down. So after we finished we left and came home. There had been ideas of carrying on the celebration afterwards by having a bit of a games night elsewhere but not all of us could go so we opted to leave it at that.

    It was later that I realised it would have been better to say it was my 55 1/3 birthday since it was actually four months after my birthday so that was another fun aspect of the day. It was kind of surreal to be having a birthday celebration months later but it was definitely a unique one as my birthdays go. Even better was the fact that Lego Lover helped me finish the cake later on. He’s a bit iffy on cakes that leave the house but he was happy to enjoy all.

    I will also point out the boys were both quite helpful in preparations. Lego Lover had the task of keeping me shopping on the Friday night while the Scientist worked on the cake. Game Fanatic kept watch to keep me out of the kitchen later that evening and even into the Saturday. It was very much a family project even though the boys didn’t come along.

    Overall it was the most memorable birthday I’ve had in years. My 50th was another prominent one with a party at home but this was a totally different sort of thing. All great fun to share with the Scientist and my friends.

  • Memories,  Music

    Music in the early years

    I was thinking about how I might write about influences on my musical tastes and I will do the album thing but it seems useful to think about the beginnings of my musical tastes.

    I don’t really recall having much interest in music when I was very young. That said, I was a big fan of Glen Campbell when I was quite young. I don’t even know what songs I liked at the time as the ones that I mostly recall are some from the mid-70s or so.

    I imagine a lot of my music knowledge was centered around what my parents listened to at the time. There was a lot of Charley Pride at my house. My mom was a big fan of it so we heard a lot of his records playing. Olivia Newton John was also quite popular although it was a bit later. I suppose we heard a lot more country music back then. But I did hear pop music too. When I was in third grade I remember the “song” The Streak by Ray Stevens was a thing. Of course I guess that was more from the country side of things too. That song reminds me of a girl named Paris in my class at school who used to sing that a lot for a time. Hmm…I just know there’s a lot of pop music I know when I hear it on the radio. At the very least we heard it in the car.

    It wasn’t until the mid-70s I started to take a more active interest in music. I guess it was probably 1975 to be exact. That summer my cousins and grandfather came down to visit us for a week or so. This was when my aunt had the baby she gave up for adoption (even though we were all told it had died)…the one who I connected with a year ago on Ancestry.

    Some where along this time I bought my first 45 rpm records. There were four of them at the time although I don’t know if I recall all of them. I still have them somewhere in the house but have nothing to play them on. The big one is Love Will Keep Us Together by Captain and Tenille. It was hugely popular during that summer and my cousin and I both loved the song a lot and sang it all the time while she visited. Even after she’d gone we started writing letters to each other and quoting lines from the song. I think sometimes before this I’d been to Pennsylvania and the big song was Donny Osmond singing Go Away Little Girl. Not sure which year but probably the year before, I guess. I didn’t have the record though. That song is still a favorite, mainly for sentimental reasons. It still reminds me of my cousin, who died many years ago from ovarian cancer.

    Another of those records was Calypso by John Denver. I just liked the sound of the song and that has always been my favorite song by John Denver. But I was a fan of some of his other music too. I guess country music played a bigger role than I realized before.

    The third single was Afternoon Delight by Starland Vocal Band…which upon reflection was a country group, I think. Funny, I never thought I liked country music all that much but I guess I did have some roots in that area for a while.

    I can’t remember what the fourth single was right now. I will have to figure it out later.

    To carry on the country theme, I used to like a lot of Eagles songs from their earlier years. I know they were more country rock but it’s still connected. I have pretty much always liked their music but it was only a few years ago that I bought a collection of their music. I guess that’s one of those groups I liked to listen to but I wasn’t compelled to have my own copy. There were lots of groups like that. I guess the reason this came to me was my parents were in a bowling league sometime in the mid-70s and these songs were playing a lot in the background there. We kids used to run around while the adults bowled. I do have ideas of getting a couple of proper albums one day in the future.

    Elton John was another artist I heard a lot of back in those days. My parents had the single Daniel which got played a lot in our house. Funnily enough that’s not one that I heard very often these days but it does take me back to those years. But I also remember the era when he sang Don’t Go Breaking My Heart with Kiki Dee really well. That was a radio play thing so I guess I must have heard it in the car a lot. I don’t have any of his albums either although I do hope to get a couple of them one day. Or maybe a compilation.

    Neil Young’s Heart of Gold is my favorite song by him and I know it’s almost completely a nostalgic choice. Oddly I remember hearing this played across the street at our neighbor’s house. They had a son who was a year or two older than me and a daughter who was quite a bit younger. My brothers and I were playing there one day and that song was on. I honestly don’t remember much else about that day aside from the song and the fact we were in the son’s bedroom for a time.

    I was also just reminded of Helen Reddy from that era too. My parents had at least one of here albums and it was played a lot. Funny to thing we were listening to an Australian at the time (not to mentioned Olivia Newton John). I remember the song I am Woman being really big for a long time. Kind of funny also to think this feminist song got played so much back then considering how non-feminist my mom has become in more recent years.

    I was just reminded of The Association as a group from my earlier years. My family had best friends from when we lived in Pennsylvania. They moved to Atlanta around the same time as a us and we lived in the same apartments. Back in PA were were neighbors in an upstairs/downstairs apartment or duplex so of thing. Anyway, we were close with their family all the years I was growing up. I spent the night there many times and I remember hearing the Association music being played. I think Never My Love was the most prominent but I am sure there were plenty of others.

    I guess the last music I will mention is probably one of the earlier records I knew. My parents had a copy of the first Beatles album released in the US. It didn’t have a cover from the point I recall it and I think it was mentioned at some time that we kids destroyed it. It may well have been me, in fact. The Beatles will get a look-in at some point of sharing although I haven’t quite worked out which album. So there is definitely some pop music I remember from way back although I wouldn’t say it made me a Beatles fan at a young age.

  • Family,  Memories

    Family

    In 1975 I was ten years old and my family lived just outside Atlanta, Georgia. We moved there when I was a toddler and my younger brother was born there. Our first couple of years were in an apartment but then my parents built a house in Forest Park and that’s where we were in 1975.

    I couldn’t say exactly when, but my mom’s sister came to live with us from Pennsylvania that year. She was ten years younger than my mom and her father was grandma’s second husband. There’s another sister who was still in high school at the time and is only six years older than me. Anyway, Aunt D had married and had had a baby just out of high school and was now either separated or divorced. Anyway she was again pregnant when she arrived that year.

    I won’t say I remember too much of that time except that we shared a bed and I apparently used to kick her quite a bit in the early days. I’d been the only girl and never had to share sleeping space before so I was a bit greedy with my double bed. :) Otherwise I think my aunt and I got along just fine. I was rather excited about her new baby and looked forward to my cousin being born soon.

    It was the middle of summer and we reached the end of June. Aunt D was still there and heavily pregnant. My brother played little league baseball and we used to sit and watch the games in the hot summer sun. I have a very strong memory of sitting there with my aunt one day. In front of us was the baseball field and behind us was farmland, I think…Well something not developed in any major way at the least. Some dark clouds had rolled in and we could see the rain coming from behind us and it was such a neat experience. Any time I see the rain from afar, I think of that first time experiencing it. I don’t actually remember getting wet that day although I’m sure we must have since it was headed towards us.

    My grandfather (father’s father) used to fly from Pennsylvania sometimes to visit us. I don’t know how regular this was but he did it a number of times while we lived there. This year, he came down with my aunt and her family. I can’t recall whether they flew down or drove although it seems likely driving was more cost effective. There were three cousins in that family. One, a girl, who was three years older than me. The other two were boys, one a couple years older and one a year younger.

    Anyway, this was the first time my cousins had visited. I remember having the best time with my cousin K. That summer “Love Will Keep Us Together” was big and we used to sing along to that and we played it often. We started writing letters after that summer and that song was regularly mentioned. I don’t recall all that we did during the visit but there were some highlights. My brothers had a pup tent set up in the backyard and my cousin and I crawled into the tent one day and she somehow crawled over an open nail which went into her knee or maybe below it. She was taken off to be treated and came back with a bandage on her knee/leg.

    One of these days, my aunt went into labor and my parents went away with her to the hospital while my grandfather, aunt and uncle took us to Stone Mountain state park. I still remember us having our photo taken that day. There’s a photo we have with us standing together and my cousin’s bandage is obvious. I know we went on the railroad there but don’t recall much else of the visit. In the evening we went home. At some time, my parents returned from the hospital and told us my aunt’s baby had died at birth. I was very sad about it at the time and often recalled it over the years. I don’t remember much else from that week but I know our visitors left some time after the 4th of July and that was that. Life went on. My aunt continued to live with us for a time and I recall we took a trip to Savannah, probably later that summer as it was definitely during our vacation time. Aunt D started dating someone and eventually moved in with him. That was another relationship that didn’t last for too long.

    Eventually Aunt D moved back to Pennsylvania. She had a string of relationships and eventually married a second time and had a son in the 1980s. She went on to divorce that husband and later married a third time. In 1992, I think, she was diagnosed with uterine cancer and after a long battle she died on December 23 the following year. I remember the day partly due to being two days before Christmas but also since Lego Lover was born five years later on the anniversary.

    I moved to Australia the next year while pregnant with Game Fanatic. Then I became pregnant again in 1997 and had a fetal demise in the early second trimester. It was a very distressing time. Back then to call home cost a small fortune but I did end up calling many times after the loss. I think it was one of the first times I called and talked to my mom that I expressed the idea that I had an idea of how my aunt had felt when her baby died even though my pregnancy had not lasted so long. My mother told me at the time that in fact, my aunt’s baby had not actually died but she had given it up for adoption. I was fairly devastated when this was added to my experience. I don’t recall having that many clear feelings about that baby loss but I do know that I thought of it through the years and had mourned it in my way. This had been a horrible deception and I really felt betrayed when I found out. Not something that helped me deal with my own loss at all. I don’t know that I thought of it at that much at the time but I knew I had a cousin out there somewhere that I’d never met and possibly never would meet.

    Fast forwarding many years…

    Just after Christmas I got a message via Ancestry dna from someone who said she was a match. I went to have a look and it showed she was either a first or second cousin, most likely second. It showed she was born in 1975 and was from Georgia. I immediately thought this could be that lost cousin but I needed more information. I had a bit of a conversation back and forth with this person and she had found her biological father who thought the mother was named Dxx Mxxxxx and he seemed to think she had passed away. Well the D was right but the surname was wrong although her married name at the time did start with an M. So it seemed a bit closer. He also seemed to know she had an older sister. I’d been hesitant to share much before but with this information I felt it only right to fill in a few blanks. I felt sure this was the cousin who had been adopted. I contacted my mom and we talked and she felt this could be that child too, although she was still a bit wary.

    My new cousin wanted to make contact with her half siblings but I honestly had no idea what they might know of a sibling. I asked her to hold off on making contact until I knew what has been shared before,. I talked to my mom and she didn’t know either. It was at this point I learned that it wasn’t just us kids who were told the baby had died but any who knew she was pregnant. Apparently only my parents, my grandma and aunt knew about it at the time and the rest of us were in the dark. My mom said this was the way they handled it at the time because they felt it would be easiest for all. I guess this made me feel a bit better knowing this but it does still bother me.

    I was going to call my cousin to tell her about this but then my mom said she could ask her younger sister about it. Mom messaged me later and said younger aunt was aware but not until long after the fact. She didn’t think my cousins knew about the sister though. In fact she’d been under the impression it was a boy my aunt had had which really surprises me because I knew even back in 1975 it had been a girl that she’d been carrying. My aunt was going to call my cousin to share this news but was going to wait for the weekend. My newly found cousin was in a hurry and trying to push things along so I was keen to get the information out there sooner even though I wasn’t sure how it would be received.

    Eventually I made a call and talked to my cousin. I was highly anxious about it. While I didn’t think it would be a shock, surely it would be a surprise. I just wanted to give her a heads up. My cousin did actually know of this. Seems my aunt’s third husband had shared this with my cousin some time after her mom died. So not a shock for her. She didn’t know what her brother might know. She was okay for contact and she was going to share with her brother. This mostly took place late at night for me and by the time I got up the next day, my cousins were both friends with their newly found sister on Facebook so I assumed it was going well. More information was shared from other family members and I guess it’s all good now.

    One other tidbit is interesting and that’s that my older cousin’s middle name was after my mom. It turns out the younger sister also has this middle name with a slight difference in spelling. A neat coincidence.

  • Cat,  Memories

    Anniversaries

    Three days ago, it marked one year since our cat died from injuries likely caused by a dog attack. In some ways it seems a long time ago then it doesn’t seem so long ago. There are still the occasions when I return home and expect to see her lazily walking down the driveway, making me wait to pull the car in. :) I changed my Facebook picture to one with her in it last year but I think I will soon change to something new since it’s already been over a year.

    Today would have been my close friend’s birthday if she were alive. This is my local close friend who died four and a half years ago from bowel cancer. She should be 54 now.  She is still on my mind a lot of the time but so it’s kind of weird to think it’s been so long since we talked now.

  • Family,  Memories

    End of being fifty

    A year ago I had my fiftieth birthday and I was kind of excited about it. Aside from the year I turned twenty, I have never been very bothered by birthdays with regard to getting older. Last year was no exception and it was kind of cool reaching that nice milestone. I didn’t think about it too much but as I approached my birthday recently, I was feeling a bit sad because my year of being fifty was drawing to a close.

    On Wednesday I reached fifty-one and it’s just not quite the same. I liked being fifty quite a bit. I’m still not bothered about yet another year but I think perhaps that was my favorite year as ages go. Funny how that came to be without me really realising it until it was nearly over.

    As for my birthday itself, it was a nice one. It was very low-key and I guess that’s how it should be after such a big one last year. It was just as well because I wasn’t feeling particularly great on the day. On Monday, my left shoulder suddenly started hurting for no apparent reason. It was better on Tuesday but didn’t feel great on Wednesday. On top of that, my period started early and it has been a rather unpleasant one…menopause is still a ways off, I guess. I’m still not feeling all that great a couple days later, enough that the planned visit to Fremantle was called off. I was up for it in one way but probably wouldn’t have dealt with it that well and we stayed home instead. I started back on iron tablets today because I figure I probably need them although I haven’t had that checked in a while.

    Anyway, the birthday was nice. The Scientist took me out to lunch at a cafe we’d been wanting to try for a little while. It’s kind of a fusion east Asian sort of place. I chose stir-fried udon noodles and they were yummy. The sauce was a bit on the sweet side but it was good. I then got a bubble tea from one of my favoirte tea places, which also quite good. After that we came home and I got my presents. My gift from the Scientist is a fancy flash unit for my camera. I’ve been frustrated with the flash on mine for a while so I look forward to working out how to use it properly. The boys (really Game Fanatic) got me game for the Wii U with a few accesories and also got me a coupld of games to play on his Playstation 4. I haven’t tried out the Playstation games yet but they should get a bit of a workout over the weekend, particularly after I am feeling better. Not sure if I will play today or not since I’m feeling a bit run down.

    The Scientist made me a nice chocolate cake which was enjoyed by all. I think Lego Lover particularly liked it since he ate so much of it. :) The Scientist’s mum came over in the evening and gave me a couple of things, including this lovely top that she got in Sri Lanka. And it even fits nicely too. She also got one those cards that you color in did it up for me. It was quite special.

    I talked to my mom on Skype just after midnight at the start of my birthday and got many messages from friends and family via email and Facebook. It’s really nice to feel so loved.

    So I guess now the thing is to get used to not being fifty any more. I’ll just have to put up with these odd years for the moment, particularly as I’m in no hurry to reach sixty. :D

     

     

  • Holidays,  Memories,  Photography

    Holiday photos

    I just finished sorting, processing, uploading and detailing photos for the first two days of my holiday.  They are in the album Auckland Day 1&2 in the Auckland Holiday collection and it will be in chronological order if viewed within the album.

    You can find the album here.

    Still to come:

    • Day 3 (and beyond)
    • Turning 50
    • Birthday Surprise
    • Absent-mindedly almost 50

     

    I’m hoping to continue the Auckland posts shortly but may do birthday/turning 50 posts before that since it’s still quite fresh in my mind.

    Perhaps when I get caught up, I will think about creating a gallery for my trip on this website, probably with a pared down collection.

  • Family,  Memories

    It was twenty years ago today…

    I misrepresent the fact when I say twenty years ago today as this was true on the 4th of June.

    More correctly, it was twenty years ago this month that I first step foot on the continent and country of Australia as I arrived in Sydney, wearing a red shirt I remember was once a favorite. It was only just still fitting me as I was already five months pregnant with Game Fanatic. It was short-sleeved, which wasn’t exactly ideal for the early days of winter, but it was comfortable for travel. I don’t really recall much of that first stop now but we took another plane to Adelaide where there were only about four terminals. It was much smaller than I might have imagined, even for 1994. We then flew from Adelaide to Perth and arrived on a rainy, cool day at Perth domestic airport. There were a bunch of people at the airport to greet us, mostly people I’d never met before.

    I will say now that making a move to the other side of the world is quite a big deal and can be quite stressful. Add the fact I was pregnant with my first child and had certain family members trying to keep me home, and it was much more so. The one aspect of those first days I remember well was how much it rained and rained. But then the sun would come out and we’d see rainbows. It was a pretty regular occurrence that first middle of the year winter and it still happens reasonably often during the rainy winters here. I was very homesick at the start but I think that kind of disappeared in October when Game Fanatic entered our lives. I really didn’t have time for any of that homesick business and managed to get through his first six months in a bit of a blur. I do remember some of it but not all. I had to get a driver’s license a few months after he was born as the Scientist had procured a job and it was pretty useful to be able to drive places rather than depend on assistance from family or do without car travel. It wasn’t really that hard once I started driving as it was all essentially opposite to the way I had driven in the US, right down to the steering wheel on the opposite side of the car. I got my license and I remember one time I was driving  and had the baby in the backseat but had put a plastic rocker chair from a swing in the front and the police stopped me…I think it appeared I had the baby in the front seat but once they saw him firmly buckled into his seat in the back, they waved me on. At least I assume that’s why I was stopped and waved on.

    It took quite a few years before I felt like this was home. Well, it’s not totally home because the US is still my native home and always will be. But I did eventually feel settled here and got my citizenship in late 1999 before travelling home the first time with the kids in early 2000. And now it’s twenty years later and it seems so long ago and yet not so long ago either that I arrived here.

  • Memories

    Reaching into the memory bank…

    Well, that’s what is seems like at times. Last night I was chatting to my mom on Skype and we somehow we got onto a discussion about something or other that brought up the of friend of another family’s daughter. At the time my mom mentioned her as the younger brother of that guy I used to ride up to college with. Hmm…I drew a complete blank at this although she did remember the guy’s name was Brad. Eventually we worked out who she was talking about but I really didn’t remember riding to college with this guy. The discussion seemed to try to unlock some door in my memory, though, as today, I do have a relatively vague recollection of this happening. I remember enough to know that this guy must have been three years older than me as I’m sure this only happened freshman year. I honestly have no memory of the actual rides back and forth, positive or negative. This wasn’t someone I knew particularly well but I must have known him enough not to be have a memory of riding with some strange person. It’s just interesting how I didn’t remember this at all, then some memory of it seemed to leak out into my consciousness. I have a better recall of bus rides back and forth from Greensboro to Charlotte….but I then don’t really recall how I got to the bus station in Greensboro so I can only assume it must have been close to campus as I don’t think I had to make arrangements to get there each time. Or maybe I did and that memory is still locked away.

  • Memories

    Naps

    I was just reading a meme on my Facebook feed about naps and it triggered a memory.

    When I was about four and/or five, my mom worked as a real estate agent and we were looked after by a woman named Mrs. McGarrity, who looked after quite a number of kids in her home. I don’t recall how many there were but each day after lunch we were supposed to lie down on the floor for a nap. There seemed quite a few of them aside from me and my two brothers, so I’m guessing there might have ten or more kids there. Anyway, when it came time for a nap, I would never sleep and she used to get highly annoyed. Thinking a bit more about it, I think she spent that time watching her soapies and instead of sleeping, I was watching what she was watching. :) Anyway, I remember she eventually got fed up and put me into a bedroom with the door closed. I don’t know what she expected I would do but I didn’t nap there either. I remember I used to get up and walk around the bed and look out the window. I’m not sure if this happened just once or if if became a regular thing.

    That’s mostly what I remember about going there, aside from a vague memory of all us kids playing out in the backyard. We only went there for a year or so. When I started school, my mom stopped working and stayed home with my brothers.