That's my teenage years.

Animavore wrote:I loved Enid Blyton books as a child. They were among the first books I read. I remember I would read 'til I got a headache of the shiny white pages. I never even noticed the moralizing. I just read them to take my mind away from the fact that I had to go to bed at 8 even though I never went to sleep 'til after midnight. It was such an injustice I thought. In the summer I'd be in bed and it would still be bright and I could here the other kids playing. Between that and dragging me to church on a Sunday, a place I have always deeply hated, another grave injustice inflicted on me by my mother, plus the beatings, my childhood was not altogether happy. It wasn't bad though.
Luckily for my kids they will have a father who understands them better and will give them way more freedom and choices than I had. My guide fr bringing up kids is think what my mother would do and then do the opposite.
Which was mostly lashings of Ginger Ale!Charlou wrote:
...what was right with the childhood of the famous five, for example...
Deep Sea Isopod wrote:Imagine....Being locked in a room with nothing but (hidden) Enid Blyton books.
That's my teenage years.
Animavore wrote:I loved Enid Blyton books as a child. They were among the first books I read. I remember I would read 'til I got a headache of the shiny white pages. I never even noticed the moralizing. I just read them to take my mind away from the fact that I had to go to bed at 8 even though I never went to sleep 'til after midnight. It was such an injustice I thought. In the summer I'd be in bed and it would still be bright and I could here the other kids playing. Between that and dragging me to church on a Sunday, a place I have always deeply hated, another grave injustice inflicted on me by my mother, plus the beatings, my childhood was not altogether happy. It wasn't bad though.
Luckily for my kids they will have a father who understands them better and will give them way more freedom and choices than I had. My guide fr bringing up kids is think what my mother would do and then do the opposite.
It is always important for children to have someone they can identify with in their reading...LBoN wrote:
...I also loved The Naughtiest Girl in the School series.
In the books she started out as the Naughtiest girl in the school and then she ended becoming the 'Head Girl'.JimC wrote:It is always important for children to have someone they can identify with in their reading...LBoN wrote:
...I also loved The Naughtiest Girl in the School series.
Food always featured, didn't it?JimC wrote:Which was mostly lashings of Ginger Ale!Charlou wrote:
...what was right with the childhood of the famous five, for example...
I also was a nerdish goody-goody at school...littlebitofnonsense wrote:In the books she started out as the Naughtiest girl in the school and then she ended becoming the 'Head Girl'.JimC wrote:It is always important for children to have someone they can identify with in their reading...LBoN wrote:
...I also loved The Naughtiest Girl in the School series.![]()
Actually, I was such a goody-goody at school.... I would have made you all sick.
I was a bit like that too.... I had my teenage rebellion period on my early 20s.JimC wrote:I also was a nerdish goody-goody at school...littlebitofnonsense wrote:In the books she started out as the Naughtiest girl in the school and then she ended becoming the 'Head Girl'.JimC wrote:It is always important for children to have someone they can identify with in their reading...LBoN wrote:
...I also loved The Naughtiest Girl in the School series.![]()
Actually, I was such a goody-goody at school.... I would have made you all sick.![]()
Until I arrived at uni, and Mr Hyde emerged... :twisted:
It was a huge part of every story; the famous picninc of the adventure books, the tuck boxes of boarding school books, fairy feasts in the enchated tales. Even now my mouth waters reading them aloud. And I still put salt in paper twists for picnics!Charlou wrote:Food always featured, didn't it?JimC wrote:Which was mostly lashings of Ginger Ale!Charlou wrote:
...what was right with the childhood of the famous five, for example...I loved and was envious of the picnics with eight rounds of sandwiches, two bottles of ginger beer and a huge piece of cake each, and a big juicy bone for good old Timothy! The eclectic, yet appetising supplies for camping trips. The hearty breakfasts, the well stocked larders, the warm and generous women who fed the children ...
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