Monday, 13 April 2026

Karloff and Crimplene

 Memory is like a baking soda diver, sometimes stubbornly staying under, sometimes rising madly in the bubbles.

As I get older my diver prefers not to rise as much now and infuriatingly I find myself forgetting my youth.

One thing I can't recall at all now is actually going to bed as a kid. 

I know I did or else I'd be a gibbering wreck somewhere.

No, the physical act of getting under the crimplene cover (hiding the coarse blankets) eludes me.

I know what my room looked liked. Well some of it. I had shelves with toys on. At some later point I had a stereo and some LPs (my first was Rock Around the Clock). There was an old coat cupboard, which I kept well shut as it was scary. Below the window was a large sideboard, where there must have clothes but I've no memory of any clothes in the room. The single clearest recollection is a huge six foot black and white poster of Karloff's Frankenstein, which was directly above my bed. 

There may have been a metal alarm clock.

Unlike my European partner, who enjoyed comfy feather duvets as a kid in the Sixties and early Seventies, my blankets were itchy and everything was covered in rayon or frilly crimplene. Do they even exist anymore?

Years earlier, when our sisters still lived at home, I shared a room and bunk bed with one of my brothers. I have no memory of this at all except an old fish tank and the toilet next door!

I'd love to recall lying in bed, getting tucked in, sipping Mum's cocoa and reading Thunderbirds annuals all night but I can't. They're as elusive as Tracy Island itself!

Do you recall going to sleep as a kid readers?

9 comments:

  1. I think I do. The bedding was certainly as you describe. We moved into a house when I was 6 that I lived in until I left home, so my room was very familiar but I think I remember things from when I was very young.

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    1. How fab to have such a great memory Kevin. Did you make stuff as a kid too?

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    2. I did. I have a memory from before we moved (so before I was 6), of making a Thunderbird 1 out of cardboard and masking tape.

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  2. Funny, I have crummy short term memory, but I can recall childhood events, some of them anyway, as clear as day. I use them as memory exercises sometimes. But what did I do yesterday? Forget it! SFZ

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  3. I hope your memories return, Woodsy. Memories are the fuel that keeps me striving to recreate my childhood milieau "as it should have been"!
    I had a happy childhood, but I suspect the war was responsible for some of my Father's problems. Ego can be a powerful but dangerous motivator.

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    1. Oops! I hit publish too soon!
      I was going to mention I used to visit my English grandfather and Chinese grandmother who lived in Dover. The cliffs were topped with rotting pill boxes that I explored.
      In a home wares store in the town, my mother bought me a remaindered fleecy bed cover in orange, with black graphics and red accent lines.
      I used to enjoy snuggling up under it, on those frosty Dover nights...
      What was the pattern?
      A giant four bladed propellor, with small Spitfires and Lancasters in formation around it and RAF with wings on the top and bottom!

      I've never forgotten it, but it has increased in significance with my current obsessions!

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    2. Wow! Serendipity Looey! Almost butterfly effecty! Really great and vivid memories!

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    3. Yes, the Greatest Generation had it rough for certain.

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