In my last chapter, I referred to my brave and loving mother, and many of you praised her in your comments. Thank you so much for doing that. I neglected to share that she passed away last year right before I had my first child, which is why my childhood stories I heard from her are all the more precious. I won't take time here, but if you would like to read a few other posts I wrote about Sue Benzing, please click on the "My Mom" label I have at the end of this post. I couldn't continue writing without putting my memories in their current context (does that make sense?).
You may not believe me, but one of my earliest memories is being in a crib, which is pretty darn early, because I got my first little sister Anna before I turned two, and I moved into a big girl bed so she could have the crib. I remember when Anna was born we went to visit my mom in the hospital. The memories are very vague, but I recall being in the elevator going to see her. My mom told me that when my brother Nathan and I were waiting for our baby to be born, my parents would say "it will be Anna or Nicholas", so when we left with Anna, we cried, wondering where Nicholas was. We thought we'd get both of them, I guess!
The next big event in my life was breaking my collarbone. I was sharing a room with my brother so Anna could have the nursery, and sleeping in a big girl twin bed. I remember that room so clearly! It had 1-2-3 curtains (which I'm certain my mom sewed) and gingham wallpaper and a hard wood floor (which is good for toys!). I fell out of my bed in the middle of the night (I was not quite two), and cried, of course, but calmed down and went back to sleep. The next day, my mother was dressing me, and I would cry when she moved my arm! Turns out my collarbone was broken! I guess that's what happens when babies fall out of their beds onto hard wood floors, haha!
When I was two, I got a riding toy in the shape of a shoe. Our driveway was at an incline (street at the top, garage at the bottom), so we would take our trikes, big wheels, or shoe, as it were, to the top of the driveway and would fly down the hill. The shoe did not have pedals, but it didn't need them! I could just pick up my feet and WHEEEEEEE! We must have spent hours a day running up and riding down. Same concept as sledding.
I sucked my thumb until I was four, and people often asked me what flavor it was. I thought it was SUCH a dumb question, but I came up with a response so they would leave me alone, and I would answer "chocolate". Similarly, I now tell people Susie's thumb tastes like strawberry when they say "does it taste good?" Side note -- my teeth stayed straight. . . so I have a hard time worrying about Susie sucking her thumb.
My mom made us a special birthday cake every year. I do not remember very many birthday presents, but I do remember what kind of cake we had. She made a yummy whipped cream frosting for a round 2 layer cake that looked thick and a mile tall to a small child. Sometimes the cake had a number candle, sometimes it had gumdrops decorating the top (or around the sides), I think it once had a plastic train for my brother's birthday, but the cake itself was the same shape and kind. And birthday parties meant my mom's whole family came over, and pretty much hyper play time was the order of the day. This first picture is of my 2nd birthday. Someone had given me gum, and I was quite enjoying the gum, but not sure how to blow out my candles with gum in my mouth! In a (soundless) home video, you see a hand reach out for me to put the gum in. HAHA! Classic!
Here is another birthday picture, this time, my third. You can see my sister Anna in the background being held up by her big brother! So funny! The other kids are my cousins Robbie and Rachel. I love how we (the big kids -- hee hee) are so dressed up, while poor baby Anna is already in her jammas! For whatever reason, I remember quite a few birthday celebrations taking place after church at our house. This cake was especially decorated with gumdroppy fruit slice candies!
One time on my birthday, I got to go to "Johnny's Toys" which was a local toy store in Cincinnati and pick out something from the birthday room. I think I may have been 4 or 5, but I can't remember. I do however, remember the TOWER of toys in that room, all wrapped in the same red and white striped wrapping paper. What to choose? You could only get one! The shelves seemed to groan with red and white packages, and I blindly chose . . . a clown doll. It was okay, but maybe not a girl's dream come true present!
Gretchen age 5 |
Those were my preschool years! Not a great deal of happenings, but that is how life goes, quite often. I remember a good number of golden days and fun at home with my parents and my siblings.
Love this!!! Great Pictures and I do remember the Cabbage Patch insanity...but I had boys at that time. Precious memories and love how you wrote them.
ReplyDeleteJanette
well...I was rather ticked that it was MY birthday and we all got presents...still not over it. ;)
ReplyDeleteAnna
Anna, how old were we? I was thinking you were 4 when you got Maude, does that sound right?
ReplyDeleteYou have a lot of fun memories! Good writing too, Gret!
ReplyDeleteUm, Nathan devising a plan rake the yard is hilariously adorable! :)
ReplyDeleteLoved this! Can't wait for the next chapter. :)
Thanks, Kari! I've thought of so many other things to include since I wrote this post late last night -- sooooo exhausted! -- so I might do a part 2 to chapter 2 tomorrow. I didn't want to make one post too long!
ReplyDeleteactually it was my 3rd birthday that I got Maude...But I didn't pick her out! Mom ordered it weeks before my birthday, and it came in a plain shipping box, and we weren't even sure if it would be a girl! It was, and I loved her.. a couple days after my birthday we were walking through Montgomery Ward and there was a tower of Cabbage Patch Kids...Mom let you two pick out one for your birthdays because they were so hard to come by, I think she didn't think she'd get another chance. But, I was such a brat because my doll had already been played with and wasn't in the box....yours were new. AND yours had a lacy dress. sigh...Maudey still smells good though! :)
ReplyDeleteAnna
They still make the cabbage patch kids boxes the same! It's crazy! And I remember the candy fruit slices! Oh, yum! yum! I don't think I ever had mine on my cake, though!
ReplyDeleteYour pictures are so sweet. They speak volumes.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your narrative of life in the preschool years.
Looking forward to next week.
I love all your memories! I had a Cabbage Patch redheaded doll that was the world to me. I remember getting her for no specific reason - just because my mom found one on the shelf and she knew how much I wanted one.
ReplyDeleteWe always tried to make birthdays special especially Mom. I love those pictures of you in your party dresses and perfect hair. Her birthday would have been this Sunday (20) What fun she would be having with Susie and Cede. By the way we wnet to see Willy Wonka at Parkland last night and Cede got to hug Willy after the play.
ReplyDeleteReading your post brings back so many memories of my own! I broke my collarbone twice, and remember both times very well! My sister sucked her thumb, and she got the same question a million times! I was too old to want a Cabbage Patch Doll, but my sister got one for her birthday before they were popular. That next Christmas was when it was really hard to find them!
ReplyDeleteI had so much fun reading through your memories!
I still have my Cabbage Patch doll. I had a bald boy because that's what I really wanted. I was WAY too old to get a doll, but I really wanted him. I got him for my birthday from my Grannny.
ReplyDelete