Thursday, August 17, 2006

Growing Up in New Zealand

GROWING UP IN NEW ZEALAND

I'm talking about hide and seek/spotlight in the park. The corner
dairy, hopscotch, four square, go carts, cricket in front of the
garbage bin and inviting everyone on your street to join in,
skipping (double dutch), gutterball, handstands, elastics,
bullrush, catch and kiss, footy on the best lawn in the street,
slip'n'slides, the trampoline with water on it
(or a sprinkler under it), hula hoops,jumping in puddles with
gumboots on, mud pies and building dams in the gutter. The smell
of the sun and fresh cut grass.

'Big bubbles no troubles' with Hubba Bubba bubble gum. A topsy.
Mr Whippy cones on a warm summer night after you've chased him
round the block. 20 cents worth of mixed lollies lasted a week
and pretending to smoke "fags" (the lollies) was really cool!..
A dollars' worth of chips from the corner take-away fed two
people (AND the sauce was free!!).

Being upset when you botched putting on the temporary tattoo
from the bubblegum packet, but still wearing it proudly.
Watching Saturday morning cartoons: 'The Smurfs', 'AstroBoy',
'He-man', 'Captain Caveman','Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles',
'Jem' (trulyoutrageous!!), 'Super d'',and
'Heeeey heeeeey heeeeeeey it's faaaaaaat Albert'.
Or staying up late and sneaking a look at the "AO" on the
second telly, being amazed when you watched TV right up until
the 'Goodnight Kiwi!'

When After School with Jason Gunn & Thingie had a cult following
and What Now was on saturday mornings! When around the corner
seemed a long
way, and going into town seemed like going somewhere. Where
running away meant you did laps of the block because you weren't
allowed to cross the road?? A million mozzie bites, wasp and bee
stings (stee bings!).

Sticky fingers, goodies & baddies, cops and robbers, cowboys and
indians, riding bikes til the streetlights came on and catching
tadpoles in horse troughs.

Going down to the school swimming pool when you didn't have a key
and your friends letting you in, drawing all over the road and
driveway with chalk. Climbing trees and building huts out of every
sheet your mum had in the cupboard (and never putting them back
folded). Walking to school in bare feet, no matter what the weather.

When writing 'I love....? on your pencil case, really did mean it
was true love. "he loves me? he loves me not?" and daisy chains on
the front lawn. Stealing other people's flowers from their gardens
and then selling them back to them...

Running till you were out of breath. Laughing so hard that your
stomach hurt. Pitching the tent in the back/front yard (and never
being able to find all the pegs). Jumping on the bed. Singing into
your hair brush in front of the mirror, making mix tapes...

Sleep overs and ghosts stories with the next door neighbours.

Pillowfights, spinning round, getting dizzy and falling down was
cause for the giggles. The worst embarrassment was being picked
last for a team. Water balloons were the ultimate weapon.
Weetbix cards pegged on the spokes transformed any bike into a
motorcycle. Collecting WWF and garbage pail kids cards.

Eating raw jelly and raro, making homemade lemonade and sucking
on a Rad, a traffic light popsicle, or a Paddle Pop... blurple,
yollange and prink!

You knew everyone in your street - and so did your parents!
It wasn't odd to have two or three "best friends" and you would
ask them by sending a note asking them to be your best friend.

You didn't sleep a wink on Christmas eve and tried (and failed)
to wait up for the tooth fairy. When nobody owned a pure-bred dog.
When 50c was decent pocket money. When you'd reach into a muddy
gutter for 10c.

When nearly everyone's mum was there when the kids got home from
school.

It was magic when dad would "remove" his thumb.

When it was considered a great privilege to be taken out to dinner at
the local Chinese restaurant (or Cobb'n'Co.) with your family.

When any parent could discipline any kid, or feed her or use him to
carry groceries and nobody, not even the kid, thought a thing of it.

When being sent to the principal's office was nothing compared to the
fate that awaited a misbehaving student at home.

Basically, we were in fear for our lives, but it wasn't because of
drive-by shootings, drugs, gangs, etc. Our parents and grandparents
were a much bigger threat! Some of us are still afraid of them!!!

Remember when decisions were made by going "eeny-meeny-miney-mo"
or dib dib's-scissors, paper, rock. "Race issue" meant arguing
about who ran the fastest. Money issues were handled by whoever
was the banker in Monopoly.

Terrorism was when the older kids were at the end of your street
with pea-shooters waiting to ambush you, or the neighbourhood
rottie chased you up a tree!

The worst thing you could catch from the opposite sex was boy/girl
germs, and the worst thing in your day was having to sit next
to one.
Where bluelight disco's were the equivalent to a Rave, and asking
a boy out meant writing a 'polite' note getting them to tick
'yes' or 'no'. When there was always that one 'HOT' guy/girl.

Having a weapon in school meant being caught with a slingshot.
Your biggest danger at school was accidentally walking through
the middle of a heated game of "brandies".

Birthday beats meant you didn't want to go to school on your birthday!

Scrapes and bruises were kissed and made better. Taking drugs
meant scoffing orange-flavoured chewable vitamin C's, or swallowing
half a Panadol. Ice cream was considered a basic food group.
Going to the beach and catching a wave was a dream come true.
Boogie boarding in the white wash made you the next Kelly Slater.
Abilities were discovered because of a "double- dare".

Older siblings were the worst tormentors, but also the fiercest
protectors.

Now, didn't that bring back some fond memories??

If you can remember most of these, you're an Kiwi legend!!!
Pass this on to another Kiwi legend who may need a break from
their "grown up" life...

I DOUBLE-DARE YA!!!!!

10 comments:

andrew brown said...

Ahhh the memories, these days it seems like it's in fashion to get fat instead of all those other things... How times have changed.

Andrew said...

You wouldn't even remember any of this stuff, being an 80's child and all

andrew brown said...

What? I remember almost all of those things! SO insulting!

Rayd said...

I can remember a lot of those things and I'm a 90s child. I remember the day the corner dairy got changed into a cafe... it broke my heart.

Andrew said...

Yeah, but I remember it the first time round.

Karen said...

That brought back some happy memories.
Oh if only life was that simple now!!!!

OBY said...

Ahh I got warm fuzzys reading that ;) although yes I am also to an 80's child... that brings back a flood of memories!

Can I ask where you got it from?

Andrew said...

Where'd I get it from?

I LIVED IT!

Jason said...

Such a shame we've traded the innocence and excitement of youth for the hustle and bustle of politically correct tolerance. The images brought back so many great memories...

Jason said...

Such a shame we've traded the innocence and excitement of youth for the hustle and bustle of politically correct tolerance. The images brought back so many great memories...