Posted tagged ‘skate keys’

“The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there.”

March 23, 2013

When I woke up, it was closer to afternoon than morning. I suspect it was the combination of pills I’m taking for my back. Gracie and Fern were still with me, both asleep. I imagine they too had excuses for sleeping so late, but I have no idea what they are. They don’t share. It took me a while to get out of bed, but I yelped less than yesterday. I guess that’s a barometer of sorts for my back getting better.

The sun is out and the sounds of drips are in stereo from the front and back of my house. Mostly they are falling from the roof onto the deck. The snow is quickly melting. I can see grass again and the streets are perfectly clear. The sky has more blue than it has clouds so I’m thinking it’s a lovely day. I filled the bird feeders yesterday, and they are now fully occupied. The woodpecker seems to be enjoying the new suet which is a far better alternative to the shingles on my house he was pecking yesterday.

The other day I thought of Mrs. McGaffigan. She used to live in the huge house on the corner at the bottom of my street. She was the other half of our party line. My brother and I used to try to listen to her conversations, but we usually giggled and got caught. She was never happy about eavesdropping and was brusque about our hanging up right away. We usually did but once in a while we only pretended so we could keep listening. I remember picking up the phone to make a call and hearing Mrs. McGaffigan. She’d tell me to hang up as she was already on the line as if I couldn’t hear her. I don’t remember exactly how we knew which calls were ours, but it had something to do with the ringing. Those were the days of clunky black phones and letters as part of the phone numbers.

I remember my mother making sure I had a dime when I went out with friends in case I needed to call. Phone booths were everywhere. I never walked by one without checking the coin slot. Sometimes I’d get lucky and find a dime. In the rain, a phone booth was a great place to wait out the storm for a while. Two and sometimes three of us would jam ourselves inside. We’d be dry but none of us could move. A phone booth always looked kind of cool in the dark when the light went on as you shut the door. I didn’t like it when the booths started to disappear and the phones with small shelves took their places. Now, though, pay phones have pretty much disappeared, and soon enough no one will even remember they existed.

I have this image. It’s a room filled with all the stuff from my childhood, like phone booths, rabbit ears, skate keys and bottle tops on shoe bottoms, and one by one a piece disappears and no one notices.

“I have recently taken up two new sports: roller skating and ankle spraining, in that order. I am getting quite good at both.”

April 21, 2010

Mother Nature has countered her rain of last week with splendidly beautiful days this week. It will be sunny and in the 60’s again today. Earlier, I was on the deck looking out over the yard. I always feel a bit like the lady of the manor when I do that.

When I was growing up, only girls seemed to have roller skates. It was okay to roller skate at a rink if you were a boy, but boys never roller skated on the sidewalk. I had those skates which tightened around my shoe with a key. I could even make them longer or shorter by sliding the middle then tightening the screw to hold them at just the right length. They had leather straps which buckled across the tops of my feet. The straps always held better than the clamps. Lots of times I’d have to walk and lift my foot high in the air because my skate had come loose from my shoe and was dangling by the strap. When that happened, the routine was always the same: undo the strap, take the key from around my neck, loosen the clamp, put my foot back on the skate and tighten the clamp again. It was best done while sitting on the curb. The key was kept on a string around my neck because a pocket just wasn’t safe enough. The worst thing to happen was to lose a skate key.

I loved the sound of my skates on the sidewalk. It was a crunch sound, almost as if I were walking on snowy ice, but when I’d hit a break in the sidewalk, my skates would click. Skates on tar had a gentler sound and an easier ride.

I’d fall, and I’d sometimes skin my knee, especially in sand. Blood trails running down my leg were evidence of a fall or two, but blood never stopped me. Only little kids ran home crying.