These
are the continuing adventures of a Swedish immigrant during her first
year as an American. She boldly went where she'd never gone
before...please come along on Adventures in America.
For
this story to make sense, I think you need to know a bit about the
neighborhood I used to live in, and the neighborhood we lived in our
first year in America.
In
Sweden, we lived on a dead end street, which was an off-shoot of
another dead-end street. Kids lived everywhere. If you wanted to
play with someone, you knocked on a door and asked. No arranged
“play dates”.
The
neighborhood we moved into used to be a “regular” neighborhood,
but had now been zoned commercial, and there were very few kids
around. In fact, appalling to me, we had parking meters IN FRONT OF
OUR HOUSE.
However,
we did manage to meet one family who lived diagonally from us. They
were a large family, don't recall how many kids, but at least the two
youngest still lived at home, and The Nutritionist made sure that
we'd become friends. She invited them over to play.
It
was a hot day, and we had one of those pools in the backyard that has
the hard sides, and if you have a pesky little brother, all he has to
do is push one of those sides down to drain the water. Of course, he
had two older sisters who were equally pushy (Ok, I'd never call
Swissie pushy, but you know me. PUSHY.) He did not get away
with that more than once.
So
here we are, the Camponella (names have been changed to protect those
who prefer not to be nude in public) kids are over, it's summer, it's
HOT. A kind of hot that Swedes rarely experience, and though we had
glorious air-conditioning (oh my, what a wonderful invention) my
mother liked for us to play outside.
I
can't believe that when I went through the albums I found a picture
of that exact afternoon. As you can see, my little brother had to
be, um, edited for the sake of my PG rating...
The
pool beckoned. I was going to loan a suit to the older daughter who was
probably somewhere near the age of me and Swissie, but the little
brother couldn't lend a suit because DataBoy was 2 at this time.
So of course, as normal Swedish folks, we said, “You don't need a
bathing suit, just take your clothes off.” In Sweden, kids don't
really wear bathing suits until they're quite a bit older, as I
recall, 6 or 7. (The Swede will probably correct me, but remember,
these are MY recollections from over 38 years ago...) They were
appalled. And went home.
I
don't remember if we ever got to play with them again, but we
probably did. I'm fairly certain The Nutritionist made amends with
Mrs. Camponella and explained the cultural differences and all that
stuff. However, I don't think they ever used our pool.
P.S After going through the photo albums, choosing pictures for my series, I found lots of pictures with the Camponellas, so we DID get to play with them again. Inside.
P.S After going through the photo albums, choosing pictures for my series, I found lots of pictures with the Camponellas, so we DID get to play with them again. Inside.