OPINION
Published on October 16, 2012 By Big Fat Daddy In Misc

I begged and whined and bugged my mom for weeks before she finally relented.   She had me cut off the boxtop;  she filled out the order and I taped a quarter to the cardboard order.  We put it in the envelope, sealed it, stamped it, and sent it on its way.  From that point time seemed to stop.  I was at the mailbox the very next day looking for my treasure.  I was disappointed that it wasn't there.  Every day I waited for the mail;  every day I was next to tears when the little box didn't arrive.  Mom explained that the box had said it could take four to six weeks for delivery...but that means little to a seven-year-old.  So I waited, it seemed forever.  

One day, some weeks later, the little box showed up in the mailbox.  I danced and wiggled and could barely hold still as mom opened the box and my treasure was exposed.  Three plastic frogmen in bright colors.  There was the guy with a torch, the guy with the anti-ship mine, and the scariest guy who had a huge knife.  They had an inverted bell shaped cup on one foot that you packed with baking soda and capped with the little metal cap.  When you put them in the tub they dove to the bottom, moved around and rose to the top again, and they did it again.  And again.  It turned out to be rather boring.  So about two or three days after they arrived I cut the stupid-looking baking powder cups off and just played with them outside the tub.  But they were a treasure;  I had them for years and they, along with my baking powder submarines, were some of my favorite toys.  

In the box with my frogmen were my green army men, my cowboys and Indians, and my animals.  I loved the cowboys that rode the horses,  the horses that would rear up on their back legs, and the dogs that looked like they were running along with the horses.

Saturday mornings when I woke up, I piled my bedspread and blankets up and they became a mountain.  I placed my plastic men in fighting positions around the mountain.  Then my frogmen would sneak up the mountain, taking out the defenders one by one, green army men, Indians and cowboys, and capture the top of the mountain.  And once on top, I would set it up and do it all over again.  

I watch my grandkids today, playing video games that do all the stuff I used to do with my blankets;  they create scenarios that are very realistic.  Unfortunately, they are very gory and graphic, as well.  But it tickles me to see that one of the video games is actually a green army men game.  Somehow, though, it isn't quite the same.  

It is just the rambling of a fat old man who is having trouble coming to grips with the facts of age creeping up on him.  I ache and wobble, heal more slowly, squint more to see the small print, have more trouble finding air at the top of the stairs, and can't figure out which side to limp on, the bad knee side or the bad back side (of course, they're not on the same side).   Remembering the feel and the smell of those plastic toys and the hours I spent with them,  developing involved stories, always winning, beating the odds, feeling good about myself.  Blah blah blah ramble ramble ramble.  Well, just sharing the memory with you, those who are old enough to remember those toys and who may have captured your own mountains those many years ago.

 

Comments
on Oct 17, 2012

The kids get to play video games sometimes, but it usually ends in fighting, so it's limited.

They like to act things out, build guns with their blocks, etc.

Growing up, I used to have these little plastic jumping frogs.  I would set them up as a football team and have them play against each other.  Imagination is a wonderful thing, and my kids have it.  They pretend all the time.  It's wonderful to watch.  Video games can limit that, but if they're limited, then you have to imagine.  You can waste your time imagining how you'd like to be playing that video game, or you can imagine you're in the video game, or you can imagine something else, but either way, you're imagining, and two of those sound way better than the first.

on Oct 17, 2012

Thanks for stopping by...I think kids have unlimited imaginations and the video games seem to thwart that.  Kids are amazing, aren't they?

on Oct 18, 2012

Yes sir, they are.  And always glad to stop by.  You have a wonderful writing style and good 'grandpa' stories (my grandpa would always tell us fun stories about his life...)

on Oct 18, 2012

It's amazing to me how fast things change.  From your generation to mine, the mail-in thing just kinda disappeared.  Or maybe I was never aware of it?

Anyway, great story as usual.  You should assemble all these into a manuscript.

on Oct 18, 2012

I used to mail stuff in to get crummy toys that you could probably have gotten cheaper at the $ store.  But some of them were really good.

on Oct 18, 2012

Jythier:  Thank you.  For a while the mail order stuff was never in stores but then they were and poof.  Sounds strange but a quarter for the toy and three cents for a stamp and we still couldn't afford to to very much of it.  The sub and the frogmen are the only things I ever got.  My sister got a couple of "girl" things but not too much.

Tova:  Good to see you again,  Yeah, I think it kinda faded out when all the cheap Japanese toys flooded the market in the fifties.  MC and I are looking at how to organize some of these things into a coherent flow...maybe sometime in the future.  

on Oct 18, 2012

Big Fat Daddy
MC and I are looking at how to organize some of these things into a coherent flow.

Chronologically is always a sure bet

on Oct 18, 2012

Tova:  Yeah, it's easy to be smart, ain't it

on Nov 06, 2012

I had one of those submarines.  I thought that was the coolest!  That and the tri-pod mounted machine gun that fired plastic bullets (legal in those days).  But they would not last long as moving made me give them up after a couple of years.  I still remember those - and my first train.

on Nov 06, 2012

Thunder-burps, Mattel Fanner 50's, and dozens of other priceless treasures...and you are right, they probably would be illegal now.