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40 Things We All Did Or Experienced As Kids But Never Talked About Since Then
Ready to blush? Just kidding—nobody enjoys making their cheeks burn out of involuntary embarrassment in awkward situations. But this time, we are taking you on an emotional rollercoaster where it may be the only option.
It’s called blast from the past. Remember your 8-year-old self drinking coke in a wine glass, thinking you were as tipsy as auntie Becky at a family reunion barbecue, ready to pass out on the floor and beg for salvation? What about the time you cried for 10 days straight after finding out that gum you swallowed would stay in your stomach forever? What if I told you that you're not the only one? In fact, that little kid with ginger frock from school, your cousin from Wyoming, and I was all secretly doing the same weird things. So, let’s go down this cringe-inducing memory lane were things we all did as kids are laid out on the table.
Pandas, is anyone having a déjà vu moment? Then share your experiences and childhood memories in the comments. Also, scroll down below to see what Krystine Batcho, a professor of nostalgia at Le Moyne College in Syracuse, New York, told Bored Panda about the influence that childhood experiences have on the course of our lives.
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Sure, and also running with the finger ready to press the living room lights
Prof. Krystine Batcho, a licensed psychologist and scholar in nostalgia, has developed a universal tool to measure our emotions towards the past using The Nostalgia Inventory Test. It measures how deeply and often people feel nostalgic.
Bored Panda asked the professor about the role our childhood memories play in our lives. “Childhood memories can influence adult lives in a number of ways. They can contribute to our overall sense of happiness in life.” Social experiences we had when little turn out to be crucial. “Positive childhood social events, such as family get-togethers during the holidays or parties to celebrate birthdays or achievements, help establish good self-esteem and healthy social skills in adulthood.”
Prof. Batcho’s life-long research has suggested that “positive childhood memories are associated with more adaptive coping skills in adulthood.” For example, people with happier memories of childhood were less likely to turn to counterproductive ways of dealing with stressful situations, such as substance abuse or escapist behavior. Healthy coping is not something we’re born with, but rather “is learned during childhood by role modeling trusted adults, and memories of how respected adults coped with adversity,” said the professor.
I used to draw on my erasers and then stamp them on my skin whilst the pen ink was still wet.
Most of us deeply cherish powerful childhood memories and carry them throughout our lives. Batcho explained that this phenomenon is called a “'rosy retrospection,' that is, a tendency to remember the past as better than it really was.” But there might be an evolutionary reason for it, because “a favorable focus on the past helps most people remain healthy and happy despite the practical and emotional challenges of adult life.”
On the other hand, one's current mood has a tremendous influence on memory retrieval. “When we are sad or depressed, we are more likely to remember negative events in our past and remember past experiences less favorably.” That’s why if you’re in a bad mood, it’s better to leave those blasts from the past for another time in order not to distort them.
I'm now having to tell my 7 year old son to get out of clothes rails in shops!
Load More Replies...Parents freaking out because they can't find me, but I am laughing because they can't find me.
At 5yo they had to shut down a whole department store in NYC because of me hiding in a clothes rack, only found me cause I couldn't stop giggling...then fast forward 18 years and I'm running around a department store with employees looking for my own little clothes rack monster hiding and giggling....karma is a you know what, right!
I honestly got lost in Sears when I was 5. I was standing at the doors crying because I was afraid they left me, but luckily my mother drilled into my head not to go out of the store if I got lost. Somebody brought me to the service desk & they gave me candy until my parents got there. Then I started "getting lost" on purpose.
Load More Replies...We got spoke to by "The Manager" for picking up the straight pins all in the carpet. My mother had us terrified of "The Manager" and we were mortified.
I had the c**p scared out of me last week by 2 little girls hiding in the clothes rack at my local supermarket. Bless them, they were just playing, but I didn't know they were there. I was looking through a rack of black tops when I saw the face of one of them looking up at me. I nearly had a goddamn heart attack! Laughed my a*s off though!
I would do that all the time and I would try to scare my parents. I still sometimes do this.
Yes! Am I the only adult who laughed her butt off when her own kids did it??
I used to hid the rounder racks and try to spook my Mom. Got confused one day and wound up spooking someone else. Good times.
Best ones were at Value City not far from home. The long ones had a space wide enough to actually run down, and the dress racks had perfect little support pieces in the center so you could disappear completely. I scared the bejeesus out of a lady one day that way.
mom is like NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Yep, I did it, and when my daughter did it and I thought she was lost in the store and freaked, the salesperson calmly went to the racks and checked them until he found her. I didn't think it was half as funny as everyone else did and made a mental noted to do something nice for my mother to make up for when I did it!
When I was a kid, I got zapped by ‘lightning’ doing this. I went into a rack of synthetic fibers (like polyester) and got a giant Zap ⚡️ Of static Electricity! True story!!!
I do this at my parents' house and I snarl and hiss because my dad's office is right at the top and I know he's sitting there witnessing it. I'm 46.
i always dreamed of having this one as kid, but mom said it was too expensive...
i still feel so proud when i hide in the bathroom while the lights out, my cousins searching for me, even get in the bathroom but didn't find me at all because of the darkness and me silently dodging their hands movement, because i got adapted to the darkness)
We were told not to do that because apparently the janitors clean the walls
So true. And the same snacks you had at home tasted 1000 times better at their place!
This is such an old wives tale, so many people still believe this as adults. For those of you that do, it isn’t true.
I used to write BOOBLESS, BOOBIES and HELLO on my calculator lol.
Note: this post originally had 66 images. It’s been shortened to the top 41 images based on user votes.
I still do some of those things. Not fully aware how adulthood works.
I love that most of them are even relatable to people from different countries and cultures.
I'm glad to see that even though I was socially isolated and homeschooled as a child, my childhood still shared things in common with everyone else's :)
Wearing swim goggles and pretending to swim through the house and looking at the ceiling pretending the house is upside down raising my feet to walk over lamps
For me it was the absolute joy in getting junk food at a friend's house for sure lol
Yes, I remember being really distressed one time because someone threw away my Rocket Pop before I was done with it!
Load More Replies...I have a score of at least 50/65. Bit sad to think I thought I was partially unique. Didn't see this listed, but I used to pour Coke into a coffee mug and pretend it was hot coffee when younger, sipping it, as though it would burn my mouth.
I’m actually kind of disappointed it didt have the taking apart of nutty bars.
I saw the same story on buzzfeed like a week ago.... whatever still funny hah!
C'est quand je vois ce genre de trucs que je m'en rend compte qu'au final, tout ce qui nous sépare, c'est nos langues. Parce que notre enfance est quasiment (voir exactement) la même 😂
We had a fad when I was 8 or 10 (mid-70s) of felt mouse figures, about life sized, wearing an outfit and accessories. They were expensive in the stores so if our parents weren't buying, we would take felt and accessories and make our own.
What a great journey back to childhood! I did almost all of these things! It's so funny to see that they seem to be almost universal.
I still do some of those things. Not fully aware how adulthood works.
I love that most of them are even relatable to people from different countries and cultures.
I'm glad to see that even though I was socially isolated and homeschooled as a child, my childhood still shared things in common with everyone else's :)
Wearing swim goggles and pretending to swim through the house and looking at the ceiling pretending the house is upside down raising my feet to walk over lamps
For me it was the absolute joy in getting junk food at a friend's house for sure lol
Yes, I remember being really distressed one time because someone threw away my Rocket Pop before I was done with it!
Load More Replies...I have a score of at least 50/65. Bit sad to think I thought I was partially unique. Didn't see this listed, but I used to pour Coke into a coffee mug and pretend it was hot coffee when younger, sipping it, as though it would burn my mouth.
I’m actually kind of disappointed it didt have the taking apart of nutty bars.
I saw the same story on buzzfeed like a week ago.... whatever still funny hah!
C'est quand je vois ce genre de trucs que je m'en rend compte qu'au final, tout ce qui nous sépare, c'est nos langues. Parce que notre enfance est quasiment (voir exactement) la même 😂
We had a fad when I was 8 or 10 (mid-70s) of felt mouse figures, about life sized, wearing an outfit and accessories. They were expensive in the stores so if our parents weren't buying, we would take felt and accessories and make our own.
What a great journey back to childhood! I did almost all of these things! It's so funny to see that they seem to be almost universal.