General
11 May 21
11 May 21
@divegeester saidWhy do you ask, and would you be willing to share first?
What are your strongest memories from childhood, with a little background if you are happy to share?
11 May 21
@kevin-eleven saidIt’s a topic for discussion in the general forum. Nobody has to say anything they don’t want to.
Why do you ask, and would you be willing to share first?
@divegeester saidSo you're fishing for private information without offering any yourself.
It’s a topic for discussion in the general forum. Nobody has to say anything they don’t want to.
P.S. -- Your "persona" presents itself with these profile words: "violent delights have violent ends" -- but even though I was also a fan of HBO's Westworld (or at least of its trailers' promises), perhaps some might hesitate to provide deeply personal stories to such a mill.
11 May 21
@divegeester saidNevertheless, I'll share this:
What are your strongest memories from childhood, with a little background if you are happy to share?
When I was about 4 years old, my Uncle Hans vanished a D-cell battery from his hand and made it appear in the drawer of a nearby chest.
Hans wasn't his real name, but he was a friend of my family and my Godfather. He had a glass eye and drove a Mercedes. One of my first regrets is that I called him an oaf for making me take a nap.
11 May 21
@divegeester saidWhen I did my education as counselor, I was told that if you want to work with early memories and the client can't remember you can ask them to invent an early childhood memory and it would work just fine.
What are your strongest memories from childhood, with a little background if you are happy to share?
That might be my strangest experience in relation to early childhood memories.
11 May 21
@kevin-eleven saidIt’s just an innocent thread about strong childhood memories.
So you're fishing for private information without offering any yourself.
P.S. -- Your "persona" presents itself with these profile words: "violent delights have violent ends" -- but even though I was also a fan of HBO's Westworld (or at least of its trailers' promises), perhaps some might hesitate to provide deeply personal stories to such a mill.
Paranoia can be a mental disorder, you should consider getting help.
I would say one of my strongest childhood memories was one of a period (but only for a period) of isolation, sadness and loneliness due to absent parents; for differing reasons, accountabilities and outcomes.
Another strong memory was the wonderment at seeing my baby sister for the first time.
And a third would be the joy and freedom of cycling in the countryside with my friend.
@divegeester saidI remember an early occasion when my father picked me up from kindergarten on his bike - I sat behind him - and the bike suddenly stopped because my foot was stuck between the spokes in the wheel. My father was very unhappy about this and bought me a little plastic turtle that could turn its head from side to side, and I think it made me a little happier.
It’s just an innocent thread about strong childhood memories.
Paranoia can be a mental disorder, you should consider getting help.
11 May 21
@torunn saidThis incident has stayed in my memory for 70+ years, not because of the pain but seeing my father so worried is what I recall most.
I remember an early occasion when my father picked me up from kindergarten on his bike - I sat behind him - and the bike suddenly stopped because my foot was stuck between the spokes in the wheel. My father was very unhappy about this and bought me a little plastic turtle that could turn its head from side to side, and I think it made me a little happier.
@divegeester saidI remember being stung by a bee for the first time in Mevagissey. It buzzed around my ice cream cone for a bit but then went up the leg of my blue shorts and, seemingly due to the efforts to remove him, he stung me on my thigh.
What are your strongest memories from childhood, with a little background if you are happy to share?
A little background that I am happy to share:
We had a light blue 1500 cc Simca estate car at that time.
@divegeester saidWe'd go to the wooded ditches and embankments where the western wall marking the boundary of Roman Verulamium was and pretend that we were Spitfires and Messerschmitt 109s. My calm and non-judgemental willingness to be the German pilot and plane in these dogfights pre-echoed my opposition to leaving the E.U. in later life.
And a third would be the joy and freedom of cycling in the countryside with my friend.
@divegeester saidI had a whole set of very vivid memories of playing in the garden in Crowthorne in Berkshire when I was about three years old.
It’s just an innocent thread about strong childhood memories.
I was rather disappointed when I was about twelve to realize, having unearthed the projector and 35 mm film from the attic, that I did NOT have vivid memories from the age of three, but instead, I had watched these 35 mm films when I was about six or seven and forgotten that I had.
Even though the memories of playing in the garden in Crowthorne were seen - in my mind's eye - as if from the point of view of a camera pointed at me, it had not caused me to doubt the veracity of those vivid memories until BOOIINNG... the shoe dropped as the twelve-year-old me saw the same scenes, from that same point of view, flickering on the sitting room wall.
11 May 21
@kevin-eleven saidπ€£π€£π€£π¬
Nevertheless, I'll share this:
When I was about 4 years old, my Uncle Hans vanished a D-cell battery from his hand and made it appear in the drawer of a nearby chest.
Hans wasn't his real name, but he was a friend of my family and my Godfather. He had a glass eye and drove a Mercedes. One of my first regrets is that I called him an oaf for making me take a nap.
11 May 21
@divegeester saidYeah lay off the Soda for a bitπ
It’s just an innocent thread about strong childhood memories.
Paranoia can be a mental disorder, you should consider getting help.