My most memorable friendships were forged on the playground
of Commodore Perry Elementary School in Mahwah, New Jersey. It was a time when kindergarten wasn’t
mandatory and only lasted a half day.
The playground seemed enormous and was divided into sections: the black-top, knee scraping hop-scotch area,
the swing set, slide and jungle gym region, and the field for kickball, racing
and other sports.
Boys had cooties and reveled in flinging earthworms that
seemed numerous on the asphalt after a hard spring rain. Hop-scotch would entertain us for the
duration of our allotted playtime and I had my first experience of shoe envy
when Kim could stomp a lion-shaped sole pattern into the dirt with her new
lace-up shoes. Nike was years away from
being cool, but having a pair of Kangaroo sneakers with the tiny zipper pouch
on the side earned you instant celebrity status. The girls would plan our outfits ahead of
time if the play of the next day was the gleaming silver jungle gym, hexagon in
shape with promises of danger. Dresses
could only be worn if shorts were underneath.
The only girl who didn’t seem to care was Becky. Second grade brought a newcomer to our group,
whose parents just returned from a missionary trip. Jennifer was blonde and exotic with her tales
of travel to places like Africa. We
would spend time along the back fence of the field picking buttercups and
holding them beneath each others’ chins to see who liked butter.
One day, the teachers decided that the boys and girls could
no longer play with each other, perhaps due to a worm flinging session gone
awry, and play time was divided in half with the playground divided between the
field and the other areas. At half-time,
a whistle would sound and we would dutifully switch sides. The girls field time was spent with “Mother
May I”, “Red Rover, Red Rover”, “Red Light, Green Light” and “Octopus, octopus,
by the sea, octopus, octopus you can’t catch me!”
I have forgotten a lot of things over the years but it is
true that you never forget the kids you grew up with, the childhood games you
played and a time that still seems within reach.
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