Welcome to a sunny and warm spring day in South Manchester. It looks like we have dismissed winter for another few months, although typically, particularly in the UK, it can come back just to nip us on the arse occasionally.
It must be getting warmer because the cricket season starts in a couple of weeks and I will be popping to Old Trafford to watch a few games this season as long as the weather is good enough that is.
Let’s answer some silly Sunday Stealing questions about adolescence. I have to say that this time of my life was particularly hormonal and as such I became a bit of an arse before I finally started to grow up. You could argue that I am still growing up in my 60’s – it’s a long process for me.
Have you ever:
1. Skipped school?
No. I was a cheeky little bugger but I was quite studious and conscientious; I wanted the best grades possible. The school I went to was a grammar school which put a lot of emphasis on succeeding academically with the ultimate goal to be to attend university and fly off into the sunset with a great career with great qualifications. While I used to arrogantly question the teachers and act like an immature little monster, they somehow managed to convince me that academic achievement was something that I needed to pursue. That means that I never even considered playing truant.
2. Lettered in a school sport?
I had to look this up. I have never heard of “lettering in a school sport” and Mr Google informed me that it is an Americanism that means that you have excelled so much in a sport that you have a letter on your jacket to display as a sort of award. This actually explains a lot to me in that I never realized the significance of having a jacket like this:
I have seen them but usually only in American “teen” movies. You live and learn.
We don’t have such things in the UK and to be honest I wasn’t good enough at sport to have achieved such a dubious accolade. I did make the school sports team for cross country running, which involves a race over rough terrain such as fields, roads and woodland for a middle distance of about five miles on average. I hated it because you had to run in the coldest parts of winter. I failed at rugby because I was too small and I failed at cricket because I was hit in the face by a cricket ball and it made me very nervous about participating. I did play other sports but for fun more than achievement.
3. Made a prank phone call?
Oh yes. We called up one of my teachers once pretending to be meals on wheels and it was working until my mate screamed out my name. The teacher never said anything but I am sure that he started picking on me more afterwards. We also called taxis for people once or twice.
4. Paid for a meal with coins?
Not a meal but a pint of beer. When I was a student in Liverpool, I had a jar where I stored all of my spare change, and one day I worked out that I had a few quid in there – enough to buy a couple of pints at the local pub. Sadly, when I counted out the cost of the pint in 1p and 2p coins, the barman told me that he would accept it this time but not again. I was tempted to question his judgement until I realised that I was surrounded by a lot of local people who were already annoyed at this spotty little bespectacled student.
I never did it again.
5. Laughed until some sort of beverage came out of your nose?
Oh yes – several times as both a child and an adult. The last time it happened was when somebody told a joke in the office and I had a mouth full of tea, which I managed to eject from my mouth and nose all over my desk, onto my keyboard and all over my notebook. It was unpleasant but I couldn’t stop laughing. And the worst thing was that the joke wasn’t even that funny – it just caught me unawares.



12 comments:
1: no, unless I was sick which doesn't count as skipping.
2: no, that's a US thing and I avoided sport as much as I could by volunteering to keep score
3: no, there weren't many phones around when I was young
4: yes, school lunch on tuckshop day but rarely. I usually took a sandwich from home
5: no.
Hi River,
Yes - being sick doesn't count in my eyes either. I used to volunteer to keep score at cricket too but I ended up playing mostly.
:o)
Cheers
PM
Prank calls never really came to mind. BTW, I can still my friends' phone numbers, and they moved a half century ago; what does THAT say?
With so few public phones available anymore, are young people still able to make prank calls? It seems like that may be a lost art.
Hi Roger,
I can still remember my mum's old phone number - but that's about it. People don't have landlines these days (although bizarrely I still do).
:o)
Cheers
PM
Hi GH,
There aren't many public phones in the UK either. Kids probably don't make crank calls these days I don't think. But I'm not sure tbh.
:o)
Cheers
PM
Reading the comments above . . .I don't think kids make prank calls anymore. I didn't realize that "lettering in a sport" is only a US thing!
I have thought about paying my next dental bill in coins because they've added a surcharge to use a credit card, apparently now allowed by law. They *really* want you to use your debit card that goes straight to your bank account, but I refuse to do that on principle. Now I write them a check on the theory that it probably costs them more to have someone make a bank deposit than it would have to just accepted my credit card without the surcharge.
I've only skipped school as a teacher (Mental Health Day).
Hi Lisa,
You have a lot of unique things over in the US that a lot of you guys think are more global. I think the same applies to other countries too (including the UK).
:o)
Cheers
PM
Hi CD,
There are a few places in the UK that add a surcharge if you use credit card. It's so annoying.
:o)
Cheers
PM
Hi Kwizgiver,
I don't think that counts.
;o)
Cheers
PM
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