Published on Goobertech (http://www.goobertech.net)

Childhood

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I entered the world back when people wore bell-bottoms and smoked a lot of weed. That’s 1975. My parents met while separately traveling the country and bumped into each other in Florida. I guess it was a pretty good bump, cause here I am — existing and stuff. They moved all of us back to Minnesota to be around my Mom’s family up in Stearns County.

When I was a toddler I enjoyed wearing nothing but my Mom’s oversize shirts and running around. (There’s plenty of photographic evidence despite my objections, so there’s no use fighting it anymore.) Mom and Dad ran a re-upholstery business and I learned how to hold a hammer when I was very young.

4 years later, my brother, Adam [1], was born. The school house we lived in burnt down that year and Dad kept busy building us a new house and shop on it’s foundations. I passed along the hammer to Adam and focused my attention on screwdrivers and other fine implements. Dad brought many objects home from garage sales for the two of us to dismantle. Adam used his hammer and smashed. I meticulously and carefully took apart each piece and organized them into piles.

And it was like that — childhood. I spent most of it observing and watching from the sidelines — organizing it all in my head. I was a wallflower. We grew up in a small town [read tribe] of barely 100 people. So the only other kids to play with ranged from my own age to 10 years older. We all hung out together in some fashion regardless. But while those other kids engrossed themselves with baseball and kickball. I spent the time wandering alone through the woods and fields exploring.

I’ve lots of great memories from back then, though:

continue… [2]


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