Weird Childhood Misconceptions
#1
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 36
Weird Childhood Misconceptions
Just wondering what kind of strange ways we tried to make sense of the world when we were young.
One of my most bizarre misconceptions when I was very little (like 4 and 5yo) I used to think that movie makers who wanted to make war scenes first had to place 'wanted' ads in the newspaper for men who wanted to commit suicide, so they could be used in the war scene for the people that died. I remember thinking this especially in relation to cowboy and Indian movies. I'm glad I worked that one out before too long!
Anyone else remember thinking some strange things?
One of my most bizarre misconceptions when I was very little (like 4 and 5yo) I used to think that movie makers who wanted to make war scenes first had to place 'wanted' ads in the newspaper for men who wanted to commit suicide, so they could be used in the war scene for the people that died. I remember thinking this especially in relation to cowboy and Indian movies. I'm glad I worked that one out before too long!
Anyone else remember thinking some strange things?
#2
My granddad was a general practicioner. Back in the "old days" GP's did everything from basic medical care, to surgery, to "popping babies". When he would get a call from his Exchange that a woman was in labor he would leave the house cheerfully telling us he was off to pop a baby. My childish brain had a terrible picture of him pushing on a mom's tummy and the baby somehow just popping out of her. Was never sure when I was little how or where, but it sounded just awful to me and certainly not something to be cheerful about!
#3
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
When I was about 3 and visiting our new house still under construction, Daddy said, "that's where the telephone will go" (plug evident on the wall), andI thought I could kneel down and talk to my grandmom by putting my mouth against the spot....and he encouraged me! I've never forgotten that; I guess their laughter made me wonder about it long enough to make it a memory.
Jan in VA
Jan in VA
#8
I was a pretty gullible child so I believed just about anything people told me.
From Dad: The neighbor's sheep had black faces because he fed them coffee.
The bull was playing leap frog with the cows.
From a cousin: Angels used sunbeams to slide down to earth, saving their wings for the flight home.
Don't eat soft eggs or a baby chick will form in your stomach. (I can't stand loose eggs to this day)
But on my own, I couldn't figure out how trombone players could swallow all that metal when the pulled the slide back toward themselves.
From Dad: The neighbor's sheep had black faces because he fed them coffee.
The bull was playing leap frog with the cows.
From a cousin: Angels used sunbeams to slide down to earth, saving their wings for the flight home.
Don't eat soft eggs or a baby chick will form in your stomach. (I can't stand loose eggs to this day)
But on my own, I couldn't figure out how trombone players could swallow all that metal when the pulled the slide back toward themselves.
#10
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Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 9,585
My DH was given a waterbed when he was 7. After seeing the movie "Jaws", he refused to sleep in the waterbed for 2 months. He slept on the floor instead, because he thought the waterbed was connected to the ocean and that Jaws would swim up from the depths of the waterbed and eat him. MIL & late FIL loved to tell that story...
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