Memoir of summers in the country in a small parish in Louisiana.
While digging for crawfish, we risked painful pinches on our hands and fingers. These little critters were mean! They didn’t particularly enjoy our invasion of their quiet, muddy holes in the ground. We’d go home with red marks all over our appendages, daring to even lower our feet into the holes once our hands were too sore. Gluttons for punishment, I suppose. Mama didn’t blink an eye. She’d just tell us to go get the iodine or alcohol, wash our hands well before using either, and boil the crawfish ourselves if we wanted to eat them.
The clubhouses we built required no air conditioning. As country kids growing up in Franklin Parish, we were well accustomed to the heat. Our mom wanted us out of the house in the summer. We didn’t have air conditioning in the house anyway, except in our grandmother’s room. We did have fans, but we weren’t allowed to drag them outside and never dared such a thing. We knew the fans were valuable during the hot summer nights when we were forced to endure the air as thick and hot as a winter blanket.
We literally used sticks and stones and old sheets to make our clubhouses. We bravely fought any spiders, snakes, or other creepy crawlies to get our clubhouses built and habitable. Sometimes, if rain were not in the forecast, Mama would allow us to leave the clubhouses intact for a few days. She wasn’t worried about any possible poison ivy or anything else we would encounter. We were country kids, after all. Everyone knew country kids had to be tough. We could always drag out the alcohol or iodine. Let’s not forget the bandaids. The glue on those things used to be so tough we’d have to soak our hands in some gasoline just to get the remains off!
I know what you’re thinking. I’m going through the short list of items and how they could’ve and sometimes did lead to pains mothers would shrink in horror from in this day and age of over-protected precious children. So, how could I possibly include koolaide?
Well, I suppose an explanation is in order. Ok, to be honest, it wasn’t actually the koolaide that was dangerous. Unless you count when we snorted it for the fun of seeing our boogers change colors. Ok, that’s just gross, I agree. I did say we were country kids, right?
Anyway, the problem was not actually so much the koolaide as it was the popsicles we made with the koolaide. A bored country kid and an ice-cold popsicle is asking for trouble. We didn’t have popsicle sticks all the time. Sometimes we had to use ice trays. Sometimes the ice would stick in the trays. See, we had the old fashioned metal trays. Can you see where this is going? Metal tray, bored kid, popsicle, freezer…..Yep, you guessed it. We had to dare each other to lick it out. That’s where the trouble came in, along with the fun. There wasn’t much that was funnier than a little brother getting his tongue stuck to the ice tray. Watching him dance around the kitchen as he yelled was a hoot. It was so cute the way he tried to maneuver his head under the faucet when he finally realized he’d have to run water over his face to get his tongue freed.
Yes, I should say thanks for the memories. Franklin Parish didn’t have much to offer in the way of fun as viewed from a child of today. But, boy we sure knew how to invent our own fun back then! Thanks to Mama and Daddy for the tough love, the freedom of letting us learn from our mistakes, and all those popsicles over the hot summers. And don’t feel too sorry for my little brother…he always knew how to get revenge!
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