“Well, the part where Romeo dies is sad. But where Juliet died is sad too. But I think the saddest part of all is when Jan said ‘Who goes there?’ before Peter said ‘Hark’.” – The Brady Bunch
Definitely would have been a better show with this cast.
There’s a larger point to some of these stories that I’ll be putting out on Friday that will become obvious over time. But I want to stress this: outside of the obvious jokes, 100% of these stories are true.
I remember the first time I called Ma Wilder “mom.” I know that’s a memory that really most people don’t have, since most people don’t even know what a mom is when they call them mom. Heck, it isn’t even the earliest memory I have, which involves PEZ®, a claw-foot bathtub, and a poorly insulated electrical appliance.
I don’t recall how old I was, exactly when I first called Ma “mom”. I do recall it was a bright spring day and Ma Wilder was ironing in the laundry room. The back door was open, letting light and air in through the screen door that led to the backyard.
What Ma Wilder figured out while ironing: she had more pressing concerns.
I think what the sentence was (memory is a bit fuzzy on this, too), but I think it was something, “I’m going to go to my room, Mom,” or something like that.
I recall being a bit scared. How would she react? I was pretty sure I was supposed to call her “mom” but what if she reacted poorly? What if it made her mad?
She said, “Okay.”
And it came out of her mouth like it was normal, though, looking back on it I think even she had to hold back and concentrate on it being . . . normal.
The reason I remember this is because, unlike all those people who have to work at it, I was born a bastard. Longer version, I believe that this was the day that my adoption was finalized and I became an official Wilder rather than “that blonde kid that keeps hanging around the house and breaking a nearly endless stream of things.”
Because I did that, too. Most of the calamities that I caused were out of a sense of experimentation. For instance, one day I was watching The Brady Bunch after coming home from first grade. Now, as rankings on television programs go, The Brady Bunch was certainly the lowest tier of after-school television. Much higher was F-Troop and also Hogan’s Heroes. Of course, the gold standard was Star Trek.
Obscure fact: Ricardo Montalban had a tough time finding work after Star Trek II: No one wanted to hire an ex-Khan.
Anyway, it was The Brady Bunch that caused much of the destruction of my family’s stored memories. You see, in one episode, Greg (it was Bobby, I think) had taken a picture that proved the receiver’s foot was out of bounds on a key catch in a football game.
How did he prove this? He took a picture into a dark room, and then put it in water with some chemicals. Presto, he was able to stretch the picture and make it bigger. Why on Earth was the Wilder family making do with these little tiny 3” by 5” (2mm by 5 liter) snapshots when I could just dunk them in water in the bathroom and stretch them to make them larger.
I was no dummy! I knew that to make this work, you had to be in the dark, so I closed the door. Thankfully, this bathroom was an interior one with no windows! I put the picture in the water and tried to stretch it. No go.
Huh, looking back I could have died of exposure.
Maybe if I soaked it longer? I’m sure I waited for at least 15 seconds before my sucrose-addled brain realized the problem. Of course! It was simple! Greg had chemicals in the water that made the photo stretch!
Where could I find chemicals? Yup, mom kept them under the sink.
I added pretty much every chemical I could find under the sink to my impromptu photo embiggening water bath. I believe I probably created a stew of chemicals that would have been recognized by OSHA as not a violation of civil law, but probably regulated by the Geneva Convention as one of those pesky “war crimes”.
I took the photo and tried to stretch it. Still a no go. Well, it must be this particular photo. Why not put all of them in the sink to try to stretch them? I’m sure it’ll work.
Hmmm, no go on any of the dozens and dozens of photos that chronicled the life of my brother (it’s now obvious why his name is John Wilder, too) from birth to 8th grade. Well, no harm, no foul, right? I’ll just let the toxic brew of chemicals water out and leave the soggy mass of soap, home cleanser, and hand lotion (I do distinctly recall adding that) covered photos dry out.
The best way to let them dry out? In a soggy mass. I’m pretty sure that when they “dried” they stuck together well enough that the only things left of my brother’s childhood are his dental records.
This was my attempt to teach my newly minted parents that I was certainly not like the other children and that, just perhaps, I shouldn’t be left alone quite so much. Silly adults.
They didn’t learn. Their next attempt was for Ma Wilder to quit her job to take care of me. There was one two-week period Ma was needed down at the bank that Pa ran to help get The Books ready for the Bank Examiners. They did what every parent would do: hire a local teenager to watch me. The first one quit after a day. The second one quit after two days.
Ma Wilder, actual quote in my room after I did this: “Do you smell something burning?”
I’m thinking that it was about this point that Ma and Pa were regretting paying that attorney all of that money to get me free and clear as their child. And I think I had broken them.
“John, would you please, after school, just come home. Make yourself a sandwich. And then sit and watch TV. For two weeks. If you do this, we’ll pay you.” The equivalent they were offering me, per day, calculates in 2022 dollars as $78.39. For a first grader. All I had to do? Just not destroy the house during those hours. I could destroy at will when I was off the clock.
This was a good deal. I accepted it, and kept my end of the bargain.
So, my first paying gig was to just restrain myself from being an insurance hazard for two weeks, for which I was paid the (2022 equivalent) sum of $783.90.
Tax free, baby.
So, they paid me. I didn’t feel slighted that they put my money into a savings account. But, what to do with all my newfound wealth? I thought about it and decided. About a month later I announced at breakfast, “I think I’m going to move out and get my own place.”
These people had all these stupid rules. It was time to fly free.
There’s nothing sweeter than a baby’s laughter. Except when it’s 3am. And you’re home alone. And you don’t have a baby.
Ma Wilder, again, didn’t react poorly. “Please tell me about your plan.”
I explained to her that I had $783.90, and I was going to go get my own apartment.
“What will you do for food?”
“I have money, $783.90 in 2022 dollars.”
She gently went through what food for a week would cost, as well as rent. She never said I couldn’t move out, but after doing the math, it turned out all the money I had would be gone in a month.
“Well, I guess I’ll stay then,” a pause, “Mom.”
My parents were firm believers in “spare the rod, spoil the child”, so most of my generally innocent misadventures like the ones you described had that as their coda. Once around first grade I announced I wasn’t taking it anymore and was running away. So I did, up the hill to the blackberry bramble where I knew I could pick blackberrys and so have something to eat for the rest of my solitary life. Lucky me, there was a persimmon tree up there, too. I sat down under an oak tree at the treeline and looked across the pastures into the valley below, surveying my new domain. It was a tableau worthy of a Rockwell painting, like the one of the friendly cop talking at a soda counter to the kid with his hobo bag. Next came the part I remember clearly even today. I saw my mom’s car way down there, stopping at my aunt and uncle’s house just down the road from ours, and talking to my aunt (about me!!!) before driving back home. I had yet to see my first Bond movie, but in that moment I knew what a Bond villian felt like – looking down, godlike, at the petty and futile efforts of others unaware of my ambitious plans!
Then it started getting dark, and I went home, and said I had just been walking around the woods, and Mom didn’t say anything about my little excursion, and life went on. A happy ending.
The second time I ran away from home was as a college graduate getting married to my first wife. Not a happy ending.
You gotta be really careful about this running/moving away from home thing. It doen’t turn out like you expect.
Yes. And with me, spanking wasn’t a good idea, it was the best idea.
There is a reason we don’t let kids make decisions for themselves. Speaking of which….
Agreed. And, agreed.
So they paid you not to misbehave. Did they call it ‘reparations’? I think they call that ‘reparations’ today, doling out cash to recalcitrant children in the hopes that it will pacify them into a docile, dull-witted stupor. Only difference here is that it seemed to work with you.
Yeah, pretty sure yours was an early prototype of the ‘reparations’ dodge.
Reparations? I’d still be owing them. Oh, wait, reparations. Got it!
Yes! The school district owes me reparations!
John, I was a little late for F- Troop, but Hogan’s heroes was indeed quality watching.
I remember particularly days being sick, because we had the television to ourselves once my parents left. I cycled through the re-runs that ran: I Love Lucy, Family Affair, My Three Sons – and then on to the game shows (The Price Is Right was a big one). Afternoons were usually some hosted movie – I could not take the soap operas – until 3 o’clock rolled around, and cartoons started.
Speaking of F-Troop, which was right up there with Gilligan’s Island in my childhood, I saw a few weeks ago that Larry Storch died at age 99.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pqa1YYfZjyg
I remember one year (4th grade?) my after-school viewing included the very puzzling Newlywed Game. What is this strange “whoopie” they were always talking about making? I imagined it must have been like making popcorn, or spaghetti, or something like that….
Gilligan! Still the best, and how I learned about Hamlet.
F-Troop is still on! I remember I Love Lucy (who doesn’t), but I’m a little young for Family Affair and My Three Sons. Guess it was regional?
Family Feud was the best game show . . .
The Geneva Conventions should probably be amended to ban the possession by young boys of the book entitled “Backyard Ballistics”. The knowledge contained therein is too good to be wasted on youths.
It’s a real book, which I loaned to a youngster a few years back and haven’t seen it or him since. Thinking back, there was that explosion I heard one day…
Ahem, please note:
“No one wanted to hire and ex-Khan”
Please, before someone see this.
Fixed. Thank you!
Fixed – thank you!
I have that one!
Hah. So I was not the only child to set itself on fire by disassembling an outlet.
Though I had a head start on you as I was four.
I did find the main power feed to Grandma’s house and found it tickled when I touched both wires . . . .
A callback to my comment about Boeing from Wed…the ORIGINAL 737 was a LEGENDARY jet. THIS is how you design and manufacture one damn good aircraft. And you retire her long before 90,000 takeoffs and landings, without trying to make every last dime you can from it…
https://twitter.com/CPD1617Scanner/status/1553032236760535041
They did do a good job. But the Twitter is maybe not that?
Ricky, the ol’ 737 is the DC 3 of the jet age, Boeing should have quit while they were ahead, and stopped with the 737-700; which is a beast. (if the fools that run airlines needed something like the -800, or the MAX, they should have made Boeing upgrade the 757) Why is the -700 a beast? Not really certain, but as ramp supervisor for Delta, AirTran, and Southwest, we would quite often go a bit past our published max wt. When bringing the load plan to the captain, the response was usually “if you can get the cargo bin door shut, we’re good, she’ll fly it”. As an aside, if we were way too heavy, they’d pull passengers before bags/freight/cargo. I’m just sayin’…