5 Things I Wanted As A Child But Alas, Could Not Have

Jun. 21, 2012
Steph is a former editor at Thought Catalog and a current writer at Gawker Media. Her work has been featured on ...
I grew up a member of the middle-middle class and had a reasonably privileged childhood, but money can’t buy everything — especially when your parents aren’t willing to spend it. These are the things that, despite my best efforts, I was unable to attain during those golden years.

Curse Words

The first time I dropped an f-bomb in front of my mother, I was seven. My brother had physically removed me from the computer game I was playing by pushing the chair I was sitting on to the opposite side of the room. “You’re a f-cking jerk!” I yelled. (Seems like an overreaction, but like… you don’t remove me from a computer. That game of Oregon Trail wasn’t going to finish itself.) My mother, who was in the room (I know, party foul) dragged me by the arm into the bathroom while my dad was showering and stuck a bar of soap in my mouth. The bar of soap with which we washed our hands before dinner. This is an actual parenting method, soap in the mouth. It is not a threat, it is a thing that parents actually do. And I mean, it’s effective, because even now when I curse in front of my parents (tastefully, mind you, and I have earned that right after years of neutering), I immediately flinch like a dog getting shock treatment from Cesar Milan.

Braces

God, it killed me to see my classmates come to school with orange rubberbands on Halloween, and like, rainbow ones just because, and black ones because they were really feeling the new KoRn album… everyone pretended to hate it, the whole ‘metal-mouth, I-sleep-with-a-retainer’ thing, but I was obsessed with their tooth-jewelry. The tragic thing is, as it turns out, I probably could’ve benefitted from braces back then (I’m too proud/old/uninsured to bother with them now).

Cable Television

You know the old MTV slogan, “I want my MTV”? Well I really, really wanted my MTV. I don’t know if you remember how difficult it was to fake seeing a television show or hearing a song before the internet blew up, but it was pretty damn hard. And obviously I had to lie about these things, obviously, because I grew up in a metropolitan area in the 90s and what kind of kid like that didn’t have cable? (This kind of kid.) Instead of having my MTV and eating it, too, I had The Box. I usually found it on channel 60-69 (The Box was like, really indie? And didn’t do things the way other channels did things? Like, stay in one place?) and I’d have to duct tape the antenna to get clear reception — where the duct tape was most effective depended on the day — and The Box essentially played the same 10 videos over and over. (“Tonight, Tonight” by Smashing Pumpkins; “Thin Line Between Love and Hate” by H-Town; “Down Low” by R. Kelly; “Peaches” by the Presidents of the United States of America; “Ironic” by Alanis Morissette; “In My Bed (Remix)” by Dru Hill; “California Love” by Tupac; “1979” by Smashing Pumpkins; “Red Light Special” by TLC; “They Don’t Care About Us” by Michael Jackson.)

Magazines

My impression of magazines, for a long time, was that they were totally crappy. (If your mother’s reading habits were similar to my mother’s — TV Guide, Family Circle, and Jet, to name a few — you probably feel the same way.) Magazines continued to lack a certain romanticism as I grew older; my dad began to let me read his old MAD magazines (which I loved, but they mostly smelled like a funeral home and were often missing their covers and most of the pages). So imagine my surprise when, in 4th grade, I was introduced to Nickelodeon magazine, a glossy for people my age and living in my era! Of course, I wasn’t allowed to have a subscription to that or to any other age-appropriate magazine because, I don’t know, my parents said so and that was pretty much the end of that. Oh, but Nickelodeon… it was like everything I couldn’t have in a shiny little nutshell.

A Broken Arm

Um, who didn’t want a broken arm? You didn’t have to take notes in class, people carried your things around for you, you got to tell a cool I-broke-my-arm story, and you got a CAST. That people could SIGN. Even your crush! Your crush could draw a sad kitty with a speech bubble saying, “Get well soon!” and then it’d be clear that you were meant to be together, and how would you know that unless you broke your arm? I rest my case. TC mark

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  • Kate

    Thank God my parents couldn’t care less about us swearing. There are no curse words my siblings and I don’t say in front of them, it’s like a family dialect. (That’s not to say we ever curse in public places or in front of other people’s children). I can’t believe your mom put soap in your mouth, that’s hideous.

  • http://dearkoku.wordpress.com dearkoku

    Tooth jewelry. Yeah, I get that. And spectacles! I wanted them so bad. So bad I ruined my eyesight so I could wear them! Now I shell out for contact lenses.

  • Michael Koh

    I remember wrapping my arm up with a bandage and pretending I hurt myself… It’s really an attention grabber.

  • rachel

    Mine would be: soda, squeezit juice, limited edition barbies (sorry mom i don’t see why it’s okay to spend $100 on electric but NOT on a french lady collectible barbie), an easy bake oven, and that doll that pissed itself.

  • Koty

    Ah, I can totally relate. Especially about the braces thing, I was obsessed with them but my parents couldn’t afford them. Now I own my crooked smile and could care less but back then, damn, what I would do to get some sweet ass metal mouth to show off.

    • lola

      This comment made me feel better about growing up with a crooked smile, didn’t know it was possible to come to terms with it, so thank you, Koty!

  • Jordyn

    this is perfect, my sister got BOTH the braces and the broken arm…I got really bad haircuts.

  • http://twitter.com/copper0928 Alyssa (@copper0928)

    When I was in 4th grade, everyone who was anyone broke their legs and had to have a buddy carry their books for them. I was so jealous. I am yet to get a broken bone.

  • http://twitter.com/JonTargaryen Carly Fowler (@JonTargaryen)

    All of this except for the braces… which they took off too early so it was kind of useless.
    I also am STILL angry that I never had a tree house or trampoline.

    I remember the first time I dropped the F-bomb in front of my mom. I was in 8th or 9th grade and screaming about being bullied or something. That was like the one curse word I never uttered in front of my parents.

  • jessica

    i used to eat fruit roll ups just so that i could stick them to the roof of my mouth and pretend it was a retainer…… whaaaaaat?

    • Domino

      ME TOO! ysaaaayyy

  • http://nocturnalcharm.com grizzledhipster

    Mines was every dayum prize on Double Dare: the R.O.B accessory for the NES, the trip to Orlando Universal Studios, The Skids, and on and on and on..

  • http://paminski.blogspot.com/ Pam

    The Barbie Dream House was my one fondest desire. My brother wished only for a Star Wars AT-AT. /cry

  • Vix

    try being the girl with the braces and glasses….. for 6 1/2 years…..
    not so jealous now, are ya?

  • seeareuh

    My mom definitely used to take my siblings’ & my toothbrushes, pump liquid soap onto it, & brush our teeth with it. I feel like bar of soap is nothing compared to this! I think it’s a Mexican thing though, my Mexican friends have said similarly.

  • MM

    when I was little I always wanted glasses cause my sister had them and so I use to fake at the eye doctor like I can’t see. Then I did get glasses and I wore them ALL the time, and now…I screwed up my eyesight and I can’t see without them. I hate contacts (or just refuse to wear them) and I am just sad because Sunglasses are so much more difficult to get (unless prescription but taking them on and off is annoying) and NO I don’t want those glasses that turn to shades in the dark, because I am not 12.

  • AK

    Haha ALL TRUE!

  • Flow

    I woulda done anything for braces but the damn NHS would only give you them if the “position of your teeth affected your jaw alignment” or some crap like that. Basically my teeth crookedness was only cosmetic. So alas no braces and still crooked teeth. Sad times.

  • Mary

    I always wanted a My Size Barbie. Even though I was taller than her anyway…She was on my birthday and Christmas lists for at least five years. But I remember the Box. If it’s the same thing you’re talking about, it was a video-request channel. Me and my friend called in once and requested “My Heart Will Go On”. Haha

  • katherinejm

    We used to put flattened paper clips on our teeth, like braces … until we got in trouble for it. So dumb.

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