Friday, January 6, 2012

Snow

George and Me.
One of us was smart . . . and the other has her hair in curlers.

I never was a particularly timid child.
In fact, if one were searching for words to describe me, 'timid' probably wouldn't have even been considered.
Boisterous. Cheerful. Loud. Noisy.
These all would have been correct.
But timid?
No.
And yet, there were certain times when 'timid', even fearful could have been used with complete accuracy.
Let me explain.
We had a TV.
It was the fifties.
We also had one channel.
Which came on the air at 10:00 in the morning.
And left the air at midnight.
I often watched as 'Oh, Canada' played in the morning.
Because I had already been watching the Indian Head test pattern for half an hour, waiting for Friendly Giant.
I never got to hear the playing of 'God Save the Queen' at midnight.
Because, let's face it, I was four.
By that point in time, I had been in slumberland for hours.
Moving on . . .
When the TV station was not airing, we had 'snow'.
And not the good kind.
White, yes, but that is where all similarity ended.
It was static-y.
And, when your brother turned the volume up loud . . .
Scary.
My brother discovered this early.
And used it often.
If he was playing in the living room and didn't want any Diane-shaped company, he would turn on the TV, confirm quickly that there really was nothing on, and turn up the volume.
Whereupon (good word) I would run, shrieking, from the room.
Heh. Heh. Heh.
Mom couldn't get after him because he hadn't said or done anything to me, personally.
Simple.
Genius.
Fool-proof.
And the room was cleared for another half-hour of uninterrupted fun.
Until Diane forgot everything that had just happened and ventured, again, into the front room.
TV. Volume. Repeat.
So you see where the word 'timid' comes in.
Unfortunately, the word 'brainiac' never applied.

5 comments:

  1. That boy had an evil streak....who knows what lurks in the static snow.

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  2. Isn't it funny what sounds, shapes, and imaginations affect the four-year-old psyche?! My daughter is four and I have seen her brothers push her fear buttons more than once. Of course, I try to stop them, but they are big brothers, after all. I think that kind of behavior is hard-wired into them. Thanks for sharing this. I enjoyed reading it. Smiles -

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  3. lol kids lol
    Boys have a different way of seeing things lol

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  4. There was a boy in the neighborhood my brothers didn't care for and when the need arose could send him running home by telling him a thunder storm was imminent. Thanks for the story.

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  5. Diane, do you think all big brothers are like this? And to think I grew up wishing every day that I had one! Had I known what yours did, my sentiments would have been totally different! I love the photo of you two as children! :)

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