May 17, 2010

When I Was Nine...

During my tutoring session today, my third grader and I read a book entitled "When I Was Nine". It was a collection of memories from someone who must've been a lot older than us because it included World War I and telephone numbers that were only 4 digits long. There were some cool memories, though. Like climbing on top of trees to watch the steam boat and locomotives go by (in Missouri...). Afterward, I made my third grader pretend he was 50 and write a letter to his nine-year old self, which should've been easy because he was already nine. He ended up writing about his first win from a swim meet a couple weeks ago.

I also did the same "assignment" so that it'd look like I was doing work. [He reads my stuff and I get to read his. It's a fair trade-off.] It's interesting to look back and see what actually sticks to you and what doesn't.

When I was nine, I was in third grade. One of my favorite grades despite being bullied, which I also told him about because bullying is a big problem in schools. That is a story for another time. When I was nine, I liked playing dodgeball, prisonball, and jump rope at recess. My siblings and I watched a lot of tv. One of our favorite shows was Power Rangers. The first season was the best. I remember being really happy when I got an A on a literature assignment because the only time the boy I liked would talk to me was when he wanted to compare grades. I liked beating him. Was that mean? My mom told me it was puppy love. I didn't understand what that meant because we didn't have any pets.

My grandparents lived with us and I have memories of my grandma working really hard. I think it gave her a sense of purpose to help our family with house matters and I remember feeling like I really needed to help her. I remember folding laundry and trying to stuff all the towels in our linen closet because they wouldn't fit. She'd clean the floors everyday, often getting down on her hands and knees to pick up anything she'd missed. I am reminded of her when I clean the floor like that. My grandma also chased my youngest brother around during meal times because he wouldn't sit still. She really loved him. I remember singing Christian songs to her because I wanted to her to believe in God. She also told us stories about World War 2 and experiencing the bombing in her apt. There was also always a sense of urgency with her. Like every little thing mattered and made a difference. I think it does.

People say a person never dies because we carry them in our memories and that is how they live on. I see parts of my grandma ingrained in me, in memory or in action. But what happens when no one remembers anymore?

When I was nine, my grandma really loved us.
And I tried really hard to love her back.

3 comments:

steph said...

yeah, this is lame as the first comment, but... what's prisonball?

lemmyboy said...

When I was nine, I was in my prime. I remember one night I was sitting in bed and I told my dad that I loved school. I would come home and watch Animaniacs and Power Rangers too. Tommy was my favorite. Was it coincidence that the Asian was the yellow Ranger, the girl was the pink Ranger, and the black guy was the black Ranger?

Tiffany said...

From the experts of wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisonball

And I really disliked Tommy! Did all the boys like him because he had the dragon dagger?! I liked Jason, the red ranger. I'm not sure if those color associations were a coincidink, but I refuse to think about it because I don't think it made a difference to me as a child.

You can also be in your prime at 29. ;)