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Hide & Seek: Using Childhood Games for Writing Prompts and Metaphors — 3 Comments

  1. A memory from our old neighborhood in the Bronx in the 1940s.

    On hot summer nights all the kids on the block hung out in front of our house, around the big hickory tree. As soon as the supper dishes were done, we all ran outside to play games in the street. I hated Hide and Seek because I was afraid no one would find me, they’d forget about me and I’d be all alone in the dark under the front porch, with spiders and other night crawlers.

    For games like stick ball or Ring-o-leavio, we divided into teams. I was always the last one picked because I was the youngest kid and an uncoordinated girl. If my big brother was captain of one of the teams, he got stuck with me. Dad’s orders.

    I was relieved when the game was interrupted by the jingling bell of the Bungalow Bar man. The roving ice cream truck, painted to resemble a little white cottage, came by almost every night. Dad made sure my brother had enough change in his pocket to pay for his own Bungalow Bar and one for me.

    A Bungalow Bar was vanilla ice cream on a stick, covered with chocolate. If you were lucky, you might get a stick with “Bungalow Bar” printed on it. That was good for a free bar the next night, kind of like the brass rings at the merry-go-round. Dad caught those for me so I could ride my favorite black horse again and again. That’s another story about hot summer nights.

    • These are tender memories. Your father’s support is so loving and well remembered by you. Would you like to make this a little longer–“Hot Summer Night Memory” would be a good title. I’d love to see an expansion of the memory–what it looked like when you were uncoordinated, what that Bungalow Bar tasted like to you, especially after the difficult time playing the team sports. What you worried about when you felt “unfindable.” And email me the expanded piece if you’d like: sbender@writingitreal.com by the end of the day September 6th.

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