Future blogger at age 7. Mother to his right. Sister he attempted to kill only partially exposed. (Photo courtesy of a friend) |
That's only the tip of the iceberg. I was much worse. Here's one story. I once was trying to have an adult conversation with my mother as she was cleaning out the bathtub, and my sister Mary kept interrupting us because she was supposedly thirsty. Frustrated, I finally handed her a bottle and told her to drink that.
It was Clorox.
You wouldn't believe how fast the ambulance came. One of the neighbors I liked to bother at 3 am was forced to watch me until my Dad returned home.
Fortunately, my sister was fine. But when I realized what I had done, I got very upset with myself and kicked the cellar window. The result was both a broken window and a huge gash on my knee.
The next thing you know I was at the hospital myself. As my sister was coming out, I was going in.
I still have the scar.
Just so you know, my sister was no angel. She used to get up early in the morning, too, and try to hitch a bus to California.
That's where she lives today.
Another sister (when very young) once put Chompers, our pet guinea pig, under the lawn mower to see what would happen when I started it. For some reason, I decided to clean the mower before starting it and when I turned it on its side, there he was!
And my brother? He's an elder in his church now, but once destroyed half of Hellertown.
In those days, we all had slingshots. I could hit a weathervane from a long distance, a feat that impressed the neighbors and even my father. My brother wanted to do the same thing. I lent him my slingshot so he could practice. He did. Very hard. He went up and down the street shooting at weathervanes but hitting everything else. There were several broken windows and aluminum sidings damaged.
My Dad actually came home in the middle of the day and started yelling at me. I had no idea why he was blowin' oil and accusing me of shooting up peoples' homes.
My brother came home while this was going on, and admitted that he and not I was the culprit. He could have let me take the fall, especially since our father was about as angry as I had ever seen him. But his honesty must have impressed my dad. We had to give up the slingshot, which he destroyed in front of us. We were told we would have to pay for the damage, though neither of us was old enough to work. That was it. No beatings. No other penalty.
The best part is that I had another slingshot about which my father knew nothing.
I was always less honest than my brother. .
My parents had five children. I think it's safe to say we overwhelmed them at times. But they would never call me a sociopath.
They'd call me a psychopath.
Penguin - very trendy back then...
ReplyDeleteWhy do you even post these, "cute" stories if you heavy censor all the comments that are inevitable. That in and of itself pretty much proves are the very things you like to joke about.
ReplyDeleteBernie I always enjoy hearing stories of our youth, thanks again!
ReplyDeleteThe Banker
Bernie,
ReplyDeleteI heard tell that you were one of a set of twins and your parents being poor folks couldn't afford both of you so they came up with a plan. They would drown the ugly one .....and that was when you learned to swim. Here's a good one, I heard tell you were one of a set of twins and one died, and you're living proof that they kept the dead one. I got a million of them, but that's enough for one day.
Bernie, today's environment the social agencies that are one of the many modern social issues would have snatched you up and took you to warnersville. Your fathers insurance would have had to pay for your stay. Now those feeding off the innocent indigent ones are more of an issue than childhood issues and those covering for one anothers misgivings!
ReplyDeleteOh I had my moments, some great ones at that!
ReplyDeleteThe Banker
Well done Bernie, and you even slipped in a quote from BatShitCrazy.
ReplyDelete