When I was a kid, my dad was heavily
involved in the local teacher's union. He was on many committees
fighting for teachers rights, and even became Vice President of the
Teachers Association. One of the committees he was on was called The
Agreements Committee. I'm not entirely sure what they were supposed
to be “agreeing” on at their many meetings, but their spouses had
a different name for it: “The Arguments Committee.” My dad's
good friend S was also on many of these committees and his wife and
my mom decided to band together in self-preservation. They realized
that there were certain times of the year when their husbands were so
immersed in meetings that their families barely saw them. They began
getting together for supper, sometimes to commiserate, or to just
have another adult to talk to instead of toddlers, sometimes to have
the men continue their work discussions in another room while us kids
ran around playing games like hide-and-seek... more about that in a
moment... Their family comprised of four people and became known (at
least in our house) by their initials KKTS. It was common to hear
the phrase “are KKTS coming over for dinner?”
I can remember several times when we'd
be getting ready to make dinner when the phone would ring.
“Have you made dinner
yet?”
“No, I was just getting to that...”
“Good! Put on a pot of water for
some pasta, we're bringing a pot of spaghetti sauce, we'll be there
in 15 minutes.”
No discussion, no argument, just “we're
bringing this, put together something to go with it. See you in 15.” Sometimes they'd even show up
unannounced, arms laden with groceries or pizza for an impromptu
meal. We've celebrated more holiday meals with them than with our
flesh-and-blood relatives. It's rather hard to define our
relationship, but basically K&S were like a second set of parents
to me, pretty much the only adults other than my parents who had the
authority to scold or punish me if I misbehaved. Their kids K&T
and I are like a weird combination of friends, cousins and siblings.
We grew up together, both in our own homes and at the STA office.
When I was a teen I babysat kids during STA meetings, and when I
graduated high-school T took over the job. When my dad died
suddenly, KKTS were there by our sides, making sure we remembered to
eat and reminding us of how to laugh. When S went through Cancer
treatment and ultimately lost his battle, Mom and I did our best to
return the favour.
I don't know who started it, Dad or S,
but when I was very young a box of Festive Christmas Ice Cream
(filled with dried fruit and other disgusting-looking items usually reserved for Fruitcake) appeared
at the dinner table during one of our get-togethers. My dad was
notorious for eating just about anything... as long as it wasn't
“healthy.” HP sauce on ice cream? Sure, why not? But when it
came to the dreaded Christmas flavour, everyone decided that this was
the most disgusting ice cream in the world and refused to eat it,
even my dad, so it went into the freezer. Until the next communal
dinner, when it miraculously appeared at the other house as
“dessert.” This back and forth continued for years. It got to
the point that the ice cream couldn't have been eaten if we'd wanted
to, it was so old and desiccated, but it kept being passed back and
forth between our freezers, mysteriously appearing after visits.
Eventually we had a horrible storm and the power was out for several
days, leaving what remained of the ice cream to melt and turn the box
into an unrecoverable sodden mess. Thus ended the tradition...
Until a little over a year ago, when after Christmas dinner at her
mom's house, T graciously gave me a ride home, and insisted on
helping me bring my leftovers and loot into the house. Somehow a box
of Candy-Cane Ice Cream mysteriously appeared in my freezer. At
Easter it made it's way to K's house, and since then has found a home
in the younger K's freezer, where it may or may not have been
consumed... his wife is expecting baby # 2 and T says there is a
definite possibility that the ice cream succumbed to someone's
midnight cravings. K has been known to eat a lot of things that the
rest of us turned our noses up at, and no one can predict the
cravings of a pregnant woman.
Now that we're adults, nearly every time T and I get together and one of us introduces the other to her friends, T will inevitably bring up one particular fact. When we were kids, we'd play all sorts of games at our house, hiding in the closet and pretending it was a cave we were hiding in to escape pirates, tag, board games, and of course... hide-and-seek.
Now that we're adults, nearly every time T and I get together and one of us introduces the other to her friends, T will inevitably bring up one particular fact. When we were kids, we'd play all sorts of games at our house, hiding in the closet and pretending it was a cave we were hiding in to escape pirates, tag, board games, and of course... hide-and-seek.
The picture of innocence. |
I had a trundle bed.
There was a normal mattress on top, and a big drawer below with a
foam mattress for sleepovers. At least, that was the intended use.
I can remember using that mattress to sled down the stairs with my
best friend and her big sister. (That cracked stain glass window had
NOTHING TO DO WITH THIS MOM! Really! It must have been the dog, and
her hard rubber ball... yeah... that's it!) But ultimately, as T
tells it, the main purpose of this bed drawer was to play
hide-and-seek, shove T (the youngest of the three of us) into it,
close it and wait for the seeker to find her. And wait. And wait.
And wait. And occasionally to forget that she was there, only to
find her some time later, either fast asleep, or screaming because
she couldn't get out. I can only remember doing this a couple of
times. My biggest hide-and-seek memories are of hiding behind the
dresser in my parents room because it was in the corner on an angle
and you could climb over the nightstand to squeeze into the space
behind, crouch down and escape detection for what felt like hours.
T's biggest hide-and-seek memories are of being trapped on a cheap
foam mattress in a drawer under my bed, too little to figure out how
to slide herself out without the help of her neglectful brother and
I. My apologies to the 3-6 year-old T for all the times we allegedly
left her under there. In hindsight it must have been rather scary.
I hid under there a few times, but by then I had the upper body
strength to grab the slats above me and slide the drawer out. She
didn't. And 25+ years later, it seems she'll never let me forget
it. I am sincerely sorry T! (But hey, at least you have an
interesting story to tell every time my name comes up, right?)
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