Yeah. He's my hero.

Mal ,'The Train Job'


Natter 36: But We Digress...  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Daisy Jane - Jul 06, 2005 2:46:00 pm PDT #7570 of 10001
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

That sounds like most other days in my hometown. There was a Dairy Queen where we could get those cones with the hard chocolate shells if we just went on an adventure through her neighborhood.


sarameg - Jul 06, 2005 2:46:29 pm PDT #7571 of 10001

OK, tomorrow if I start complaining of digestive insult, remind me I am sitting here with a bowl of cherries and it was all my fault.

I love cherry season.

Summers about that age...well, either running loose in the neighborhood, on our swingset, in the tractor tire sandbox, or the whole neighborhood in one of our many pools (cheapy pools filled from the hose.) Or digging for dinosaurs in the overflow ditch behind the houses. Smell of mud, really. NM mud and wet limestone. Mmm. The skin-tightening burn of NM heat and being 4000 ft closer to the sun than I am here.

The other that pings (mainly because I'll be back there for the first time in over a decade) is the farm in MN at twilight, running around with the cousins in the yard and family garden, playing Ghost and Starlight, Starbright. I only vaguely remember the rules. The parents would be sprawled in various webbed aluminum fram chairs, drinking suntea. It smelled of...farm. And pigs. Oh lord, it smelled of pigs. My uncle has at least 4 barns now. But you really do stop smelling it after about 5 minutes. The smell of the crabapples (which tasted like ass, but smelled so good!), cucumbers off the vine, sweet corn straight off the stalk (gotta pick those nasty worms off!) and blood and raspberries (because those bushes are evil!) Hot alfalfa and wheat fields.

Heather, I also grew knowing my maternal cousins fairly closely, despite us being scattered all over the US (and sometimes overseas as well.) Because of where I grew up, this didn't seem out of place (hispanic community there keeps family close.) Weird to think it isn't a norm.


sarameg - Jul 06, 2005 2:49:24 pm PDT #7572 of 10001

There was a Dairy Queen where we could get those cones with the hard chocolate shells if we just went on an adventure through her neighborhood.

Ours was A&W, which I was only allowed to bike to with dad. Well, I think it closed before I was actually biking under my own power, but I still remember the view from the bright yellow plastic bikeseat mounted on the back of the green schwinn. It was a pretty touring bike.

When I got older, it was the Sonic on the corner of Valley and Picacho.


Cashmere - Jul 06, 2005 2:49:37 pm PDT #7573 of 10001
Now tagless for your comfort.

I love cherry season.

Me, too. That reminds me I need to get some.


Pix - Jul 06, 2005 2:52:12 pm PDT #7574 of 10001
We're all getting played with, babe. -Weird Barbie

I still have my entire Breyer horse collection, which might be worth somethng if they weren't all "well loved" (i.e. scuffed to hell). I think I had/have upwards of 40 of them.

My summers were all about summer camp, the kind you see in kids' movies. Summer was capture the flag on Sundays and Thursday night variety shows; it was freezing cold swimming lessons in the pond far too early in the morning and bright red bug juice with dinner. It was camp songs after meals and evening vespers around a roaring campfire. It was my first kiss (to a Brit, no less) and my first job. I had my first sweet sixteen summer love under those pine trees, and I learned that even when I was a complete outcast back in my "real life" at school, there was a place that I belonged. The end of camp was the end of summer and the return to a life that seemed as faded as my duffle bag after the brightness of the August sun.


§ ita § - Jul 06, 2005 2:54:05 pm PDT #7575 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

In Jamaica, the ice cream came to us in the form of guys riding bicycles yelling "Nutty buddy! Nutty buddy!" Grapenut icecream was a big favourite.

The sno-cone came on carts, and those were restricted to the city areas, where we didn't go so much during the summer (although I was bussing to school during the term).

Also wending their way through our streets were herds of cows (we'd make a big to do of trying to spot bulls and panicking anyone dressed in red -- it was proper etiquette to freak out when so designated -- there was too much doubt for bravado).

Sometimes we'd just sit on the pillars from which our front gate swung and wave at people who drove or walked by.

More often than not they waved back. London was a bit of a shock in that regard.


Daisy Jane - Jul 06, 2005 2:54:55 pm PDT #7576 of 10001
"This bar smells like kerosene and stripper tears."

I could not believe my husband didn't know about how old his cousins were, what they were doing, that he'd sometimes not talked to them in years and had no idea how they were. This is not our way.

My closest/favorite cousin is in Seattle right now, but I'm all up on her son's development and whether or not he's a Saints fan-which he is.

ETA: Evidence, and to brag on the little bugger a bit

[link]

[link]


Jesse - Jul 06, 2005 2:55:47 pm PDT #7577 of 10001
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

From the time I was five until I was in 8th grade, my cousins came over every weekend (or just about) so my uncle could help take care of my grandfather.

Edit: 2 of my (then) five first cousins.


sarameg - Jul 06, 2005 2:56:13 pm PDT #7578 of 10001

We used to go up to the mountains 90 miles east or so where there were u-pic-em cherry orchards. One year we made the mistake of drinking cherry juice while picking (as well as eating every third cherry picked.)

Lord we had to make a lot of emergency stops on the way home. That stuff will go right through you!


§ ita § - Jul 06, 2005 2:58:23 pm PDT #7579 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

I could not believe my husband didn't know about how old his cousins were, what they were doing, that he'd sometimes not talked to them in years and had no idea how they were.

Oh, god, this is me. But I have an assload of first cousins, and second cousins are mostly like first cousins, so they make it a metric buttload.

I can tell you who's had kids, and what country most of them are in, but the ones I can give you precise ages on are the ones I've lived with, pretty much. And I'll be damned if I can keep up with even their lives.