Remember the first day of school when you were a kid. It was exciting. Not only did you get to see all your friends after the summer, and meet the new kids in town, you got to go shopping for new school clothes and supplies.
We always made a trip to Fletcher's in Gruver for new clothes and shoes. Fletcher's had a window display with a water faucet hanging with fishing line from the ceiling. Water flowed from the faucet into a bucket on the floor. We never could figure out how they did that. I also remember how embarrassed mom and Judy were when one of the Lindsey boys came running to his mom crying, holding a mannequin arm.
Being Texans, we got Levis or Wranglers. My favorite shoes were Trax. They made you run faster and jump higher. Talk about false advertising! I remember picking them out of a big bin. And digging for the match when the one shoe in my size was not still attached to its mate. Also finding someone's old shoes in the pile. I just thought they wore the new ones and didn't need the old pair anymore. Later as a shoe store manager, I hated finding old worn shoes in our bins or in a box. It meant someone had stolen from us.
For a boy anyway, clothes shopping was torture. But we loved going to Spearman to the TG&Y to buy school supplies. Looking back, I know we were on a tight budget, but it always seemed like we got what we wanted. In my case, it was pencils with Dallas Cowboy logos on them, and most importantly, a pencil sharpener inside a plastic Cowboys football helmet.
Most kids today don't get those choices. Even many public schools today are requiring school uniforms. Parents accept the idea because it takes the pressure off. Don't have to give in to the peer pressure and buy high dollar brand names. Everyone wears the same styles and colors. No one has to feel bad because they don't have the latest fad.
School supplies aren't yours anymore. They all go to the teacher to be passed out to the entire class. Since mom knows you won't necessarily get what you take to class, she buys the boring yellow pencils and square pink erasers and red, green, yellow, and blue notebooks. No more Dallas Cowboys or Smurfs or Spongebobs today. Everyone has the same blaaah stuff.
Socialism starts early. Gets us accustomed to giving up choices.
Friday, April 16, 2010
Kindergarten Socialists
Labels:
cowboys,
Dallas,
Fletcher's,
Gruver,
indoctrination,
kindergarten,
parents,
peer pressure,
public,
school,
socialism,
trax,
uniforms
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Hadn't thought of that. It is socialist, isn't it?
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