On the idealization of childhood in Daydreaming on the Porch
- July 18, 2014, 1:29 p.m.
- |
- Public
"...I think that no experience which I have today comes up to, or is comparable with, the experiences of my boyhood. And not only this is true, but as far back as I can remember I have unconsciously referred to the experiences of a previous state of existence. My life was ecstasy. In youth, before I Iost any of my senses, I can remember that I was all alive, and inhabited my body with inexpressible satisfaction; both its weariness and its refreshment were sweet to me...."
Henry David Thoreau Journals
I can still remember with both great fondness, and, the regret of passing time, those years of my childhood when we children played with such abandon and joyousness, innocence if you will, it the backyards and woods of my youth. I remember running a lot and laughing and tumbling on the ground, and many other joys of being outdoors after school and on weekends in the last 50s and early 1960s, the years I was 8-12. The days were long and adventurous when you are a kid and particularly when you were a kid in the pre-Internet age. There was TV, of course, but my mother didn't let us watch too much of it, hence all the time we spent outdoors under the big hackberry trees in summer, building little Western towns with sheets of plywood, setting up Old West saloons (we watched Bonanza and Palladin, etc.) and using wagons as stagecoaches. I was always tall for my age and I guess stronger because of it, and ended up pulling the "stage" a lot. We watched "Mighty Mouse" cartoons on Saturday morning, and afterward flew around the yard with towels for capes. There were no responsibilities other than school, and in summer that was just a distant memory in the hot afternoon of mid-July.
I think Thoreau was right about how in adulthood we lose our senses, in a manner of speaking, because we become encumbered with layers of worry and responsibility, duties and obligations, bills and finances, work and the advanced neuroses of co-workers, friends from years past who don't keep up with us and disillusion us, caregiving for aging parents, and wondering what retirement will be like. All this is what dims our capacity for the unfettered enthusiasm and fun we were once capable of having as children. How well Thoreau expresses it: "[I] inhabited my body with inexpressible satisfaction." Today our bodies and minds are both weary with age and the relentless drumbeat of adult worries and angst. Childhood now seems to me like a previous existence, a previous body, and a time of innocence we can only imagine today. Of course there were always the bullies and mean kids when we were growing up and we wanted to run away from home at times, but at least we felt secure in the knowledge that we didn't have to solve all our problems by ourselves.
Now in my early 60s, I romanticize childhood and that is ok. I'm not forgetting all the problems and pain I suffered through as an adolescent, but in the peak years of childhood, life for the most part was a golden field to play in. While it lasted.
Deleted user ⋅ July 18, 2014
So true!
Eriu ⋅ July 18, 2014
I don't think you're romanticizing all that much - I remember my childhood being similar. My mom likes to watch "Supernanny", and one day I caught an episode (too lazy to get off the couch) and wondered how the kids got to be that way - we never had to be told to be outside, and our parents didn't have to entertain us during the day. We used mops as stick horses and made mud pies. We pretended to be Batman and Robin, Superman, Tarzan. Electronics were never involved, and we watched tv but on a limited basis. You're right about what steals that childlike wonder away, that which made the world magic.
gypsy spirit ⋅ July 19, 2014
childhood was different back then, and in most cases better than now I think. The innocence and freedom, the sense of adventure and the comfort of home......some of these things seem lost to many these days. Thanks for sharing your childhood, (nothing wrong with idealism either) and I did enjoy the quote from Thoreau. My own childhood was pretty wonderful too and we didn't even have a television, I created my own fun. hugs p
LivingWaterCreek ⋅ July 19, 2014
Childhood was better back then, I think. Though mine wasn't the most pleasant I still had all these pleasures at one moment or another and cherish them dearly. We too had TV on a limited basis, making it something fun and giving the imagination something to expand from during play. Though we can never go back this is a time in life I'd enjoy "just one day" were there the possibility. Lovely entry. :)
ThoughtsAfter ⋅ August 20, 2014
True. And, I miss seeing little boys in their yards, as I used to do when I was a girl in an all girl family of siblings--playing cowboys and Indians...it was everywhere up and down the street in my neighborhood. I read something in Huffington Post today about neurons that we are just studying now that diminshing as we age and they keep us from resting well at night--have you seen that? Patients with dementia lose more than the rest of us apparently. Perhaps you have made a nod toward something that is lost after childhood that will be found later by researchers. My best...