Children can find plenty of ways to stay cool in the
summertime heat if adults will just get out of their way. All that’s needed is
a water source, something cold to drink, and maybe knowing where your mama
keeps her change purse.
As hard as it is for me to admit, I had an air-conditionless
existence until I was maybe 6 or 7 years old. That’s right. When I was very
young, a Southern summer childhood was at the mercy of an electric fan and the
sheer benevolence of an adult willing to plug the thing in, turn it on, and let
it blow on you. Yeah, a whole line of iffy situations. Seems we got the use of
the fan at naptime, after we had a bellyful of Campbell’s vegetable soup, a
tomato sandwich, and Hi-C orange drink, just as added nap-insurance. Beyond
that, a little kid had to fight for fan frontage time.
Fortunately, mamas liked their kids to play outside -
whatever the temperature - so if we got permission (and sometimes if we didn’t),
we could turn on the outdoor spigot and play in the hose. As long as you didn’t
get knocked in the teeth with the metal nozzle or get water sprayed straight up
your nose, a good time could be had by all. Holding the hose straight up made
an instant shower. Coiling it up, then then letting it go, caused all sorts of
unpredictable sprays, twists, and turns. Oooh, the water snake!
Eventually, we graduated to a super-deluxe backyard pool. By
super-deluxe, I mean a sparkling aqua-colored plastic sheet draped over a 2-foot
high white fence-type thing. The bottom had a diamond design of black, blue,
and white. It took forever to fill the thing up, but I’m telling you, nothing
Esther Williams ever had was a fine as our beautiful blue pool. It seemed huge
at the time; I’m sure it would be laughable now. But water and kids and sun can
co-mingle for long time, and we were very happy little campers. I don’t
remember Mother watching us – she was inside doing whatever mothers do. Yes.
Pure child endangerment/neglect. Thank God.
Still, there’s more to staying cool than water-immersion.
That’s where Kool-Aid and Fizzies came in. Seems like they were always in
plentiful supply – a little goes a long way for a kid – so we’d sit in a swing
or on the picnic table and have our treat. Anyway, those purple and orange
Kool-Aid moustaches washed off after a few minutes in our sparkling backyard
pool.
Sometimes, though, in late afternoon/early evening we’d hear
that glorious sound – the bells or music of the
Hunky Man (that’s what we
called the truck that came around with popsicles, push-ups, and
nutty-buddies).
Chaos ensued, as some of us waved him down, while others ran inside to
plead for enough dimes to cover the charge for our confections. The perfect way
for a kid to stay cool on a summer afternoon.
So think back on how you liked to cool off in the summer
when you were little, and share that with the little ones in your life. Even if
you have a real, in-the-ground Esther Williams swimming pool, break out
the garden hose or sprinkler sometime. Just don’t let the nozzle hit you in the
teeth. And remember to wash off your purple Kool-Aid moustache.