Time Travel with Facebook

120 Halligan

 

Her Facebook note to me said something like, “Hi.  I had a best friend named Heather Dugan who lived on Halligan Avenue with her sisters, Stephanie and Suzanne.”  She signed it “Colleen” with a last name I didn’t recognize, but I knew exactly who she was.  And just like that, I reconnected with the first “best friend” I ever had, Colleen Post.

Our backyards met at a hedge that we must have brushed past hundreds of times running to the back doors of one anothers’ homes.   We gathered hickory nuts from the shagbark that grew in her backyard and played all the little games that young girls play.  She chased after birds with me, salt shaker in hand, when I’d heard we might catch one if we could just sprinkle salt on its tail.  We ran through lawn sprinklers in the summer and built snowmen in the winter.  I remember her dog Fluffy and her older brother Greg -and I remember her brother Greg eating some of Fluffy’s dog food on a dare in their basement.

first grade

On our first day of kindergarten we rode side by side on the school bus, peeking out the back window occasionally to make sure our mothers were still tailing behind in a station wagon.  Not much later, we learned that the Posts would be moving to Sturgis, Michigan.  I still remember how foreign and far away that sounded.

It was my first real heartbreak.  I remember the day they moved as a rainy miserable afternoon.  I leaned into the drapes of our sliding glass door, sobbing, as first the moving truck and then the family car pulled away from the familiar house on Abbott Avenue.  Until then, my saddest moments had been tied to toys and bedtimes.

No matter who lived there in subsequent years, it remained “Colleen’s house.”

She lives in Alaska now.  I’m still in Ohio, just a short drive north of the neighborhood she moved away from thirty-nine years ago.  I’ve moved a few times since then too.  But, I always remembered Colleen.  It’s nice to know she has remembered me too…

***What’s your “reconnect” story?

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“Fruity Pebbles or Raisin Bran?”

From the “Unpublished Draft” file (2008):

 

Guess Who?

We regularly and consciously violate the “intended use” for one of our family board games. “Guess Who” retains permanent resident status under one of the family room sofas despite its intended six to eight-year old appeal -because “twisted” is timeless…

The game teaches logic skills as each player eliminates, through “yes” or “no” questions, all but one of the faces on his game board: the face that will hopefully match the card secretly selected by the opposing player. Normal questions might include, “Does your person wear a hat?” or “Is your person a female?”

Obviously, the game in its original form presents no challenge for its sixteen-year old owner, my son Zach. So, we came up with our own variations last year to make it a new family favorite all over again. We played our version last night.

raisin bran

“Would your person be more likely to steal candy bars or ladies’ undergarments?” “Does your guy appear concerned about the possible presence of germs in his vicinity?” “In high school, was your person a more likely sports star or Level 47 Dungeon Master?” “If your guy were arrested…felony or misdemeanor?” “ “Fruity Pebbles or Raisin Bran?” Much more fun!

“Wins” are occasional at best, but Zach did pinpoint “Tom” last night, my organ-playing Dungeon Master, who cared deeply about personal hygiene and would not be comfortable operating heavy machinery.

“Are there empty soda cans under the back seat of your guy’s car?” “On-line bill paying or check writer?” “Bungee-jumping or cooking school?” “Pet dog or pet alligator?” Get the idea? Once you get the hang of it, it’s so-o-o much better than anything on TV.

Of course, we had to defend some of our assertions. Zach declared me wrong in stating that “Paul” would skinny-dip. My stance was that “Paul” would in fact do so… provided there was no moonlight and that he could neatly fold his clothing first. I let “Paul” explain. “Look. Water. Let’s swim.” The “Paul” card tipped happily from side to side as he talked. “Creepy, mom,” was Zach’s response.

“Wanna play again?!”

I highly recommend our version of the game. “Unofficially”, of course.

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