The Old Coot remembers the
“String” era.
By Merlin Lessler
I was looking around for a
piece of string the other day, to seal a paint brush in a plastic bag, so I
could use it again. I found a ball of twine in a box of seldom used odds and
ends. It probably sat there, unappreciated for months. We don’t use string much
these days. Or rope either for that matter. But both were once vital to
everyday life.
We used it all the time
when I was a kid. A ball of string was in the kitchen, in the garage and I had
one in my room. Mom wrapped our sandwiches in wax paper and tied them with
string. It was the same thing the butcher did when you went to the grocery
store; the meat purchases were wrapped in butcher paper and tied with string
from a giant ball on a spool, right there on top of the counter. No plastic bag
problems in those days. No plastic bags.
Kids couldn’t live without
string. We needed it to make a bow from an unseasoned tree limb. How else could
we play cowboys and Indians? Fix a yoyo with a broken string? Fly a kite? String
was the thing. You needed it to pull out a loose baby tooth, tie one end to the
tooth and the other end to a door knob. Then, get your courage up and slam the
door shut. Kids, and adults too, tied a string around their finger to help
remember to do something. Our moms used it to tie turkey legs together and to
sew up a flap so the stuffing stayed in the bird.
Rope too, was invaluable
when I was growing up. The kind we used, clothesline rope, was made from cotton.
It wasn’t like today’s rope, made from plastic that unravels when you cut it; the
end has to be singed to keep it from fraying. We couldn’t dry our clothes
without rope, held up by a pully on the house and a pole off in the distance or
lines of rope fastened to the basement ceiling.
We used rope to tie up the
“bad guy” when we played cowboys and Indians. We got pretty good at it and the “outlaw”
often had to beg to be untied. But it was no problem for our dogs to get free
when we tied them to a tree; they just chewed through it.
You had to have rope to
pull your Flexible Flyer up a hill. And, especially when you were brave enough
to come down the hill, standing up. It’s how you steered and kept your balance.
We needed it to jump rope, with two people spinning a long piece of rope, while
others jumped inside the arc. I’m sure we used string and rope for a lot of
other things. Maybe you can add to the list.
Comments? Send to
mlessler7@gmail.com
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