June 24, 2010

5 Ingrained Memories

Of late I’ve been thinking about all the little things that have stuck with me as I’ve gotten older. The little life lessons or pieces of advice that get ingrained in your memory. I thought to myself, “ya know this might be worthy of a blog?”
I put my thoughts into action. I encourage all of my blog readers, all, ahem, several of you to reciprocate and share a memory of yours with the blog community by posting it along with your comments. Enjoy….

How To Properly Separate Two Frozen Burger Patties

As an innocent young man faced with the daunting task of grilling burger after burger on the Livingston American Little League grill this is one life lesson worth my memory. I can remember it like it was yesterday. Pat Ippolito taking a knife and aggressively jamming it between the patties and smacking them against the counter. Voila! Two patties just like that. Perfect separation. Who knew? I know my timid-self didn’t. But now I know. And now every single time I get behind a grill I think of Pat Ippolito and that lesson learned. Thanks Pat.

How To Properly Shake Someone’s Hand

This is the one piece of advice my father game me that sticks out the most in my mind. It was grilled in me since I was, probably, a 6 month old. I remember when I was young and timid, notice a pattern of timidity, and I would be nervous meeting other people. My father would hammer down the point, “SHAKE his hand like a man and always say “How are you?”” I hated it back then. The overbearing nature of it. Didn’t he realize I was shy? But now that I’m older you realize it was definitely a lesson worth teaching. I hate men who don’t shake your hand firm and who don’t look you in the eye. A firm handshake is a first impression. A dead-fish handshake is embarrassing and you will immediately have one strike against you. At least in this guy’s eyes….and my father’s.

How To Ride a Bike

The memory of me learning how to ride a bike has been ingrained in me since the day it happened. I’m sure it happened over a few tries and not this one instance however its this one instance that sticks out. And that is what says something. Picture the scene if you will, Billingsley Dr., circa early 80’s, a nice fall evening, a couple families mingling on the block. My parents sitting on our driveway. My sister was probably somewhere but unfortunately her role escapes me at the moment. Riding in circles in front of our house were Me, Chris and Tommy Place and the one who showed me how to do it, at least as my memory serves, Marge Place. The Place family had an armada of bikes that looked like little BMX bikes at the time. All different colors I believe. Red, Yellow and Green. I wanna say I had the yellow one but who knows. Thanks Marge. Also, for whatever reason I remember drinking a glass of orange juice on the driveway at the time. Odd. I know.

Learning How to Multiply

Another memory that goes untouched in the little mathematical corner of my brain. I’m not sure how old you are when you start learning how to multiply but I remember the actual learning part like it was yesterday. Every day my mom would leave a set of times tables for me to do when I got home from school. I can picture one of the sheets perfectly right now. It was the 9’s.

9 x 1 =
9 x 2 =
9 x 3 =

You get the idea. To this day I consider myself and excellent multiplier. Whether or not it had anything to do with these simple assignments left for me I will always credit my mom for making me do them. Now if only she had left algebra equations for me I might’ve avoided the several failures in that class as the years went on. Nonetheless, thanks mom!

How to Properly Draw a Car

Random. Yes. I know. However, relevant? Yes. Why? Well I remember it clear as day so it must’ve struck a chord for a reason. Sitting on the floor in the living room my father showed me the “trick” to drawing a car. I was amazed. I had been trying forever but was having little success until he showed me. Start with a box, 3 dimensional, and then simply begin rounding out the corners and carving out a little convertible (or hardtop if you prefer). I was amazed at how he knew how to do that. And to no one’s surprise I still enjoy drawing cars and that is exactly how I learned.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Easy Burger remedy: Bang them on the counter's edge. Safer than using the knife that when they split finally rams home into the counter top. Bike riding: The good ole days, not sure about a yellow bike though. Green fenders like a dirtbike.

See Bee Gee said...

I have a crystal clear memory of you riding your new bike July 4th, circa 1995. Your pedals kept falling off on our way to get some ice cream. That's one of the funniest memories I have, EVER.

AM said...

I too learned how to separate burgers from Pat and how to grill at the little league field. Working at the snack bar was my first job.