As a kid I used to love Legos, so much in fact that I loved Christmas and my birthday because most of the time I got some Lego related — my favorite being some medieval castle. One day I spent all my waking hours putting together a Lego city. It was small in size — around 4′ by 1′ — but took a lot of hard work from a youngster. It had a racetrack, high-rise, and houses for the little Lego people. That night my dad, and Uncle Mike came in late from a night at the Hitching Post and literally destroyed it. So I rebuilt it the next day and made it better… and so begins this exciting story.
I had enough Matchbox cars to fill up not only my Matchbox Toolbox carrying case but also another big box too. I loved having miniature car shows where I’d pick out my favorite toy cars and put them on display. I would then pretend there were rival car gang groups and they would all fight in a good versus evil style. It’d be interesting to look at those again because it would probably bring back some pretty funny memories.
At one time I was fascinated by video games. One Christmas morning I got the Nintendo gaming system (a big thing then) with the Power Pad for some Olympics style game. For some reason I remember my uncle (same one) being there and he and my dad running on it thinking it was the most pointless thing ever. It was, of course, but I was probably six or seven so it was the greatest thing for me at the time.
I can remember when I was about nine or ten playing with my action figures, I could come up with the most elaborate scenarios. I had this battle plane thing and I would get so lost in that whole thing. Looking back on it I find it kind of ridiculous, really. If there was no one to play with then I would simply make up an entire world to rid myself of boredom. I wish I could remember my characters’ names now because they were always cracked out — like Captain Seabass or something. I was a little too creative, I think.
I don’t know where that imagination went. It’s got to be around somewhere, because occasionally I have a flash of self-proclaimed brilliance. Now instead of play time antics and fantasy worlds, it usually comes in the form of written words or lengthy conversation. If I try to use that same childhood imagination to figure out what I want to do with my life (which at one time was an astronaut until I was old enough to learn I’d have a better chance of winning the lottery) I usually daydream about the past (as in right now) and purposefully ignore what lies ahead. I don’t want to think of it from a grown-up’s perspective because that will have meant I’ve given up being a kid and thus the end of youthful exuberance.
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March 14th, 2005 at 09:55 am
Bah! There’s no end to youthful exuberance. If Bush can blame DUI at age 30 on youthful exuberance, you have no worries. Of course, some would argue he has the mental capacity of a child.