How Skate World Changed My Life

When I was in middle school, we didn’t text, chat with our classmates on Xbox, or look up cute boys online.  We couldn’t.  It was the Mesozoic era, and the technology didn’t exist.  So what did we do without the huge cornucopia of Apple-inspired abundance at our fingertips?

Hanging out with my Mesozoic friends. Image from Flickr

We hung out.  Together.  As in, a congregation of people in the same place at the same time talking, laughing, relaxing and having fun.

At first we were just a neighborhood group of 6th graders playing kickball in the cul-de-sac every day after the bus dropped us off from school.  We were small.  Like, short and super-pasty until we acquired our first sunburns of the season, blistered, peeled, slathered Noxema on our faces, burned again, and painfully prepped our oozing skin for baby oil and the long, tan, sunny days to come.

OMG SO CUTE. If this were a picture of me, I'd...
Pre-tan sunburn. Image via Wikipedia

By the following summer, various groups morphed into an actual circle, stationed shoulder-to-shoulder by the high dive from the moment the gates opened at the pool until the lifeguards kicked us out.

A year later, our circle doubled on top of itself and became a two-tiered figure eight that included just about the entire school.  We’d graduated to non-parent supervised activities, and everyone wanted to be a part of that.

Off-duty lifeguard kicking back. Image from Flickr

As the venues got bigger, my friendships grew.  Not in a six degrees of Facebook, “OMG! We went to the same driver’s ed school but graduated six years apart and never even crossed paths (literally! ha ha ha!) but somehow share 62 connections, so will you be my friend or at least like my macramé page?” kind of way.  Back then, “friendship” had a clear definition, and was something much more organic and real.

By 8th grade, I was a little person on the edge of a big world, and my growing independence meant I was more than ready to wean myself from drive-in movie night with Mom and Dad.  For me, it was beyond a big deal to be dropped off by my parents (but not where anyone could actually see me being dropped off by my parents), skates dangling from my shoulder, with a $5.00 bill in-hand.  I was always a little early so I could get the best cubby to store my stuff, and save a place for my friends at the front of the line.

The line to get into Skate World, that is.

With feathered bangs shellacked to my head and a plastic comb sticking out of the back pocket of my Jordache jeans, I was ready to roll.  Literally.  Like, all night long and right into adolescence.

Image from Flickr

Every Friday night, me and a few hundred of my peers propped ourselves against the shag carpet-walls, laced up, and hit the floor.  Nothing could keep us away.  It was our chance to talk, laugh, roller dance, and venture out into life in a safe place, without anyone who cared about good posture or whether or not we’d written our science fair hypothesis looking over our shoulders.

There was no danger of drugs or alcohol, and barely even a cigarette back then.  I’ve heard about the temptations middle school offers today, and to be honest, I’m more than a little scared for my kids.  The only hazards at Skate World were the threat of too much craziness during the Need for Speed contest, a huge face-plant because some stupid 7th grader dropped his gum, or sweaty palms in the middle of a backwards couples skate to Journey’s Open Arms.  We were allowed to roll toward preteendom under a cloak of innocence, drifting away from Mom and Dad with some bruises and falls, but nothing you could really call broken.

Image from Flickr

The more I skated, the better I got, and in a way, my prowess in the rink mirrored my growth in life.  At first, I stuck to the middle of the floor, close to the guards and skate-standing a lot more than moving in any preplanned direction.  I was trying to stay up without falling down, and with strobe lights flashing in my eyes and a ginormous disco balls orbiting overhead, I was a little spooked.  Unsure of myself, I didn’t venture very far.

Image from Flickr

But soon, all of my friends moved further out, and they looked like they were having a lot more fun than me.

So after school, I’d log hours of practice in the creepy basement, learning to balance, turn, and increase my speed, forever trying to catch up to girls who seemed to be born with wheels instead of feet.  They were so much better than me, but as I skated from pole to pole, trying not to trip on the drain or kill myself jumping the random pipes sticking out of the ground, I got better.

Speed skates are cool.

In time I moved from the center to the middle of the rink, better known as the chill zone, a fairly risk-free area where the majority of the kids hung out, flipping around backwards to talk, or test a new move.

As I shifted spots, my closest friends were now stationed on the outside: Roller Derby central.  This part of the rink both awed and scared the crap out of me, because it was where the best skaters held court, sailing around with a dizzying array of twists, speed, precision-cut turns, and an uncanny ability to somehow stay ahead of the beat.

Just watching them made me want to stop, glide quietly toward the nearest exit, and play Galaga in the arcade for the rest of my life.

A Christmas tree ornament shaped like a Galaga...
Image via Wikipedia

But there they were, talking, laughing, dancing, speed-skating, and motioning for me to join in.  It was positive peer pressure, the kind that tempts you to be better, not worse.

So one night I closed my eyes, stepped out, pushed forward, and let myself fly (albeit at the back of the pack so I could immediately abort if a rabid 7th grader tried to cut me or rip off my face).

these teams were all phenominal to watch the o...
Image via Wikipedia

I felt like I had arrived.  Where?  I wasn’t sure, but I didn’t really care because the beauty was in the journey itself.

Even though we eventually outgrew our skates, we never left the lessons we learned behind.  Skating, like life, is about balance.  Make the wrong move and you’ll end up flat on your face, but work hard enough and you’ll have the chance to fly.  Every Friday night, my friends and I learned from each other while we taught our own lessons at the same time.  And we didn’t even know it.  Now that my skates are packed away in Mom’s and Dad’s creepy basement, and my son, Taylor, begs to play Call of Duty instead of seeking out the boys next door, I realize what we had.

When I look at the canvas of Taylor’s pending middle school life, I can’t find Skate World or anything close to its equivalent in his line of sight.  Sure, there’s a roller rink in town, but nobody goes.  All I see are schedules and seminars, too many meaningless distractions, and not enough time.  Time to fly, that is.  And it makes me sad.  I’m not sure where he’ll find his place to grow, safe from my prying eyes and all of the scary things in the world.  But I’m looking, and I hope he is too.

Skate World Playlist

Halloween 2011. Still roller dancing, even if we’re by ourselves in a corner. Skate World rules!
  • Rapper’s Delight – The Sugarhill Gang
  • The Stroke – Billy Squire
  • Double Dutch Bus – Frankie Smith
  • Hold the Line – Toto
  • The Freaks Come Out at Night – Whodini
  • Eye of the Tiger – Survivor
  • Celebration – Kool and the Gang
  • Another One Bites the Dust – Queen
  • Super Freak – Rick James
  • Jack & Diane – John Cougar
  • The Message – Grandmaster Flash
  • Heart of Glass – Blondie
  • Genius of Love – Tom Tom Club
  • You Shook Me All Night Long – AC/DC
  • Funkytown – Lipps Inc.
  • I Want You to Want Me – Cheap Trick
  • Let it Whip – Dazz Band
  • Open Arms – Journey
  • Freak-A-Zoid – Midnight Star
  • Jessie’s Girl – Rick Springfield
  • Le Freak – Chic
  • 867-5309/Jenny – Tommy Tutone
  • Jam On It – Newcleus
  • Waiting for a Girl Like You – Foreigner
  • All Night Long – Lionel Richie
  • Freeze Frame – J. Geils Band
  • September – Earth Wind & Fire
  • Urgent – Foreigner

*Thanks to Susan Klosterman Francke, Laura Badorek Hasler, Tiffany Calvert Diehl, and Michelle Clasby Depoy for their contributions to this playlist!


Comments

268 responses to “How Skate World Changed My Life”

  1. We lost power last week and our kids spent the evening screaming through the house playing hide and go seek in the dark. While the high pitched squeals eventually wore on our nerves we endured it because we knew they were getting a tiny little taste of pure unadultered childhood – unplugged. Makes me want to turn off the power at least once a week:)

    1. Right, but no scary ghost stories. I pulled out an Ouija board one night when ours went out and scarred my kids for life.
      =)

  2. Jessica Tisdale Avatar
    Jessica Tisdale

    OMG, Stace! This sooo brought me back! I will admit I was kind of a show off at the skating rink. In Fort Smith, AR it was called “Golden Wheels” for us. Oh, the memories!!! For a minute I thought you left Freak-A-Zoid off the list but saw you did have it on there. I love how you incorporate and parallel it to what our kids have today. It’s so different. I too sure wish they had what we had.

    1. I’m sure you knew how to shake that thang. I would have been in awe!

  3. I see the word “freak” in a bunch of songs on the playlist. Wondering what that says about skaters. Spoken by someone who was rarely brave enough to let go of the rail. Sour grapes? Perhaps.

    1. You may be onto something there. Why don’t you download the songs, strap on your skates, go down to your basement to work through some moves, and see if you change your mind? =)

  4. Only because there’s no “Love” button. Or “Wish I’d Done That” button. Or “Kinda Hate You a Little Because You’re So Good” button.

    1. Are you joking? That “travels with bono” post was one of the funniest, most unique things I’ve seen in awhile. In fact, so much so, that I’m going to follow you. So I can steal your stuff. =p

  5. Lovely writing, Stacie! I can very much see that happening–the rink, the sound track, the friends trying to be cool while not acting like they’re trying to be cool. And you’re right, unfortunately, kids don’t do that so much anymore, although our local ice rink gets its share of business and my daughter has fun there about three times a year. I love the image of you skating back and forth in the basement!

    1. Thanks Laura, for some reason I spent a lot of time in the basement growing up. I don’t know if that’s good or bad. =)

  6. Thanks for taking meback to another era and the memories of a time when my body didn’t punish me for doing things like skating. 🙂

    1. Thanks for taking the time to comment!

  7. Heather Bonshire Osborne Avatar
    Heather Bonshire Osborne

    Stacie – Those were great times, weren’t they? The Skate World is now the JTown City Hall. Do you remember having to get a silk jacket? Mine was royal blue. When I moved into my first house I found my skates, they still had purple pom-poms on them with bells. I’ve tried to skate since then and failed miserably! Skating is definitely not like a bike! We have been unable to have children, but I can definitely see where you are coming from. We had so many cool places to hang out – Douglas Hills Swim Club, Middletown Manor, Pro Bowl, Oxmoor Mall, Showcase Cinemas. Kids now have chat rooms, texting, and online games. It just won’t be the same.

    1. They were great times Heather! I didn’t have a silk jacket, but I did have a SWEET silk one-piece leisure suit. It was rainbow colored and super-comfy. Thanks for taking the time to comment. Hope all is well with you. =)

  8. Oh, I love this; it’s the Stacie I know, and the friends who formed her life with her and created the wonderful story and pieces we read in the narrative class. I bet they wrote many of those notes in your collection.

    Thank you for this glimpse into you.

    It brought back memories of the freedom of my skate key, oxfords and the lock on skates that brought me a sense of freedom exceeded only by my Schwinn, blue, if I remember. Flying through the air up and down streets of my neighborhood, not nearly so crowded with friends.

    Thank you, Gemini girl,

    M Lyn

    1. Thank you Lyn. You are always so kind and supportive…I appreciate it!

  9. Susan Francke Avatar
    Susan Francke

    Memories . . . like the corners of my mind. There is a song in there somewhere that didn’t make the Skate World Hit List. Thanks for taking me back . . . I think. Funny the things you appreciate about your childhood when you are all grown up. Who knew we would miss such a thing for our own kids. We use the RV to recapture just a tiny bit of the world before technology. Heading off now to find my speed skates with the purple wheels so I can attempt a quick spin around the garage after I get all the kids on the bus. Wish you were here to join me.

    1. Let’s go to the Preston Skate World this summer! Maybe if we’re lucky they’ll still have burnt fakette cheese nachos that we can feed our kids to show them how lucky they are we know how to use our crock pots. I always think of you when I walk down memory lane, look forward to catching up real-time. =)

    2. Thank you Lyn. You are always so kind and supportive…I appreciate it!

  10. we roller skate once a year in the youth groups mentoring community. so fun! still hasn’t been lost here, yet. i missed it when it closed down in my home on the other end of the state.

    1. It’s sort of sad to know that Skate World in my hometown closed too. I’m glad you’re still able to go. Thanks for sharing!

  11. Definitely brings back memories — though, considering I’m 6 feet tall, my Amazonian legs never proved good at skating.

    But I liked hanging out in the snack bar and ogling hot guys!

    😉

    1. OMG I we could have been a fake couple because I’m only 5’4″ and you could have pulled me through your legs. Wait. Scratch that. It sounds super creepy. Maybe we’d be better off hanging out at the snack bar. =) Thanks for your comment!

  12. i enjoyed reading this post !!!
    good one 🙂

  13. “Call of duty”, Wifi and the lure of the internet make me sad for all the reasons you have said. There is so much out there for kids but they aren’t looking when screens fill the here and now. I wonder what the result will be and I envy my parents who thought they had it tough, but never had to fight the ‘gaming years’. We are boats on a wide wide sea without a compass in hand to guide us. But at the end of the day it always comes down to balance – teaching the values of the old ways in a land of technology – great post!

    1. Great and thoughtful reply. I battle gaming every day. Somehow the words “go outside” don’t hold the same appeal for my son as “go gaming.” As long as we’re aware, though, we can work to open up their world. Thanks again!

  14. OMG I literally laughed out loud reading this post. I mean like slapping my knee, almost choked on my delicious apple – laughing out loud. I’m definitely subscribing, you are hilarious and I love your writing style. I’m not as funny but I hear that I’m a great writer…would love for you to check out my blog. Peace

    1. I’ll definitely check your blog out. Thanks for taking the time to comment and for all the love.
      =)

  15. I remember roller skating! What fun memories…It was huge in Wisconsin in the early 80’s!
    Congrats on being Freshly Pressed!

    1. OMG I LOVE LOVE LOVE Wisconsin! I spent time working at a camp in Sayner over summer break in college. I could go on and on and on…in fact I will in a future post….thanks for the FP love, I’m still trying to figure it all out.

  16. I love everything about this post — what a blast from the past! Our local rink was called “Hagy’s Fontainblu” and it had one of those Pac-Man games that was IN the top of the table. Remember those?

    1. Totally remember the in-tabletop Pac Man. But who came up with the name Hagy’s Fontainblu? How did anyone know what was going on inside? Love the squirrel circus theme BTW. Thanks for the comment!

  17. I would just like to be the first to congratulate my blogging bestie, Stacie Chadwick (a.k.a. Gemini Girl In A Random World) on getting Freshly Pressed today (with this post!) – and replacing my post, “Why I Hate Witty People” as a Featured Humor Topic Article!!!!! Just yesterday, she was the recipient of the 7×7 Link Blog Award and now she has ascended the ranks to wordpress.com stardom. No one deserves it more. Congratulations, bestie!

    1. No one deserves it more than….YOU! I’m just riding the wave of your coattails sista. For anyone reading this comment, go to paltrymeanderings.com RIGHT NOW to check out Cristy’s stuff. She is the FUNNIEST blogger I’ve encountered to-date (and I do a lot of blog trolling), was just featured on Freshly Pressed, and is my best blogging bestie ever.

      More on why Cristy is someone you have to follow (spoiler alert: there’s magic involved) in Thursday’s post.
      =)

      1. I love you, bestie! Trust me, she’s not riding on my coattails. I was just one of many recognizing her talent and that’s what got her Freshly Pressed. Thank you for the wonderful compliments, as always, but really…spend your time reading all of Stacie’s posts. She’s hysterical and charming and all the things that makes a blog special. Plus, as her blogging bestie, I can tell you that she’s actually an insanely NICE person. I know that may ruin the mystique, but she’s super humble and sweet and smart and the kind of person you’d really like to hang out and have a margarita with. And one day, I just may get the opportunity. Why don’t they have a bar in the blogosphere?

      2. See why I’m so lucky Cristy is my blogging bestie? Even her comments give me chills! Make sure you check out paltrymeanderings.com. It’s amazing, hilarious, touching, hilarious, awesome, and hilarious.

        By the way bestie, to follow-up on your blogosphere bar question, why doesn’t the Apple Genius Bar serve cocktails? Like, duh Apple. If you did you could unload them for $20.00 each while all of us tech-losers wait around for help with our blogs, and your company would be worth a gillion ginormous MORE dollars than it is today.

        OK, luv ya like a sis…I’m off to write!
        =)

  18. Wonderful post, and so true – there’s 10 years between my younger brother and myself, and those years make such a difference in how we interacted with friends in school, use of technology and what it was to just hang out with friends.

    Thanks for sharing and congrats on being freshly pressed!

    1. Thanks for the love and for taking the time to comment. My little bro is seven years younger…wish we could have skated together! =)

  19. Loni.Found.Herself Avatar
    Loni.Found.Herself

    This was my life back then, too! My older sister and I would carefully coife our hair to the highest possible point allowed for bangs, gather our Slap Bracelets, put on some acid-washed jeans, and head to the local roller rink each and every Friday night. I have so many wonderful memories of skating along to such hits as “Parents Just Don’t Understand” by DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince.

    Over Christmas break this past year we actually went back to that rink with my sister’s kids, now tweens themselves. It was this odd combination of sad and awesome.

    Anyway, great post.

    Oh, and the worst possible thing that anyone did back then in the rink was perhaps make-out behind one of the pinball machines. We steered clear of those kids. 🙂

    1. Yes. Those crazy arcade kids who never got out on the rink were bad news. Thanks for sharing your memories and for taking the time to comment. I appreciate it!

  20. The Taller than Average Woman was right! Great stuff.

    1. Usually, people who are taller than average have larger brains than those of us who are short, so I follow them around a lot. Thanks for commenting!

  21. Your post brought back so many memories! I used to practice skating moves in my basement, too. Love it! 🙂

    1. Thanks! I can’t get our kids to go down into our creepy basement without major bribery. Their loss I guess. =p

  22. LOVE this post!! Just last week I went roller skating with my friend for the first time in YEARS! Somehow, we found a roller disco in Toronto and it was the greatest thing ever. I felt like a kid again!

    P.S. Skate World’s playlist is awesome. 🙂

    1. Love your pic! Can I lift it and post it as mine? =p
      Glad you like the playlist…I now have the Skate World playlist on my iPod. “The Freaks Come Out at Night” is especially good for weight lifting.
      Thanks for the comment!

  23. Awesome post! Thank you for sharing!

    …following your blog…

    1. Thank you for commenting, thank you for following! =)

  24. When I was young I loved rollerskating!

    1. Rock on, it’s never too late to skate!

  25. Is that Skate World in MI? I spent my youth there! It was a pleasure to read this!

    1. Skate World in KY, although it appears, based on feedback to this post, that there’s one in every state. Thanks for your sweet comment!

  26. OK, seriously, I think we may have grown up together!! Everything in my childhood experience is IDENTICAL, well, except that no guys ever asked me to skate, and I was ice-skating instead of roller skating (Western PA – everything is frozen in winter), and actually there were a few dangers like burning your tongue on hot chocolate (I seemed to do this every time) or some redneck wanting to kick your a*& in the parking lot for no good reason. Other than that, it is like you were writing the words of my childhood!

    Great post!

    1. OMG I almost got my a*& kicked in the parking lot too, but it was because I went out with a guy in high school who forgot to mention that his ex-girlfriend was crazy.

      Love that we have parallel childhood experiences, even if you froze your a*& off.

      Thanks for taking the time to comment!

  27. Wow, so interesting to hear about the kind of culture other people grew up in as youth. And it is sad how teenagers these days seem to be growing up so much faster or are exposed to more negative things than perhaps in the past. Don’t worry though, it’s not all bad 🙂
    Congrats on getting FP!

    1. Thanks for the FP love and for your thoughtful comment!

  28. Awe! It was the Ice that called me! Ice Skating was where you would find me, and I didn’t care if my friends were their or not! Actually, I only took to rinks after we moved away from Tahoe, before that I could be found with a bunch of friends with blades on our skates hanging around our necks riding bikes across town to the watering hole that was still frozen. We would take on Mountains to get to that frozen pond. I did not discover skating at night till after I discovered rinks.

    I did occasionally go roller skating in H.S. but it just was not for me. In Junior High, I lived in the same town as Charles Schulz and we use to all skate at the ice rink he built for his daughter. Roller skates are harder to control once you are use to that blade. Hehe! I am sure it was much the same as I met a major boyfriend that I had for a number of years ice skating!

    Thanks for the memories
    Sj

    1. Thanks for sharing your memories with me! Charles Schulz’s ice rink huh? That’s super fancy and sounds like a lot of fun. =)

  29. Great post, Stacie! It brought me right back to my days at the local Roller World. I used to live in my skates back then…I miss it. I haven’t skated in so long, I’d probably break my neck now.

    1. Thanks for the love! For anyone reading this comment, check out this site. It’s She’s A Maineiac and is only one of four that I have on my blogroll. Great stuff!

  30. Dang!! That playlist is smokin’ lol. It really is. When I used to skate, those songs were cranked up to the max, and even today, I have some of them on my ipod. (Don’t ask me my age, ahem)

    Great story. Loved it

    val
    valentinedefrancis.wordpress.com

    1. I won’t ask yours if you don’t ask mine. OK, fine. I’m 29. Year after year. Thanks for the comment.

  31. Reading your (fab) blog- it reminded me so much about my own childhood, and how we used to congregate together as well- but ice-skating! It would outdoors, a sportsfield turned skating rink, and they would play music over the loudpseakers, which we thought was ultra-cool at the time. You stayed out there for so long, at times you had to go sit in the changing room (which was an outdoor wood shed type of a thing, to warm up, and then you’d stay out there skating until your toes froze. Aah… such memories. Lovely reading about yours.

    1. Love your memories too. Thanks for sharing!

  32. I hopped over here as soon as I read Paltry Meandering’s aka Cristy wonderful words about you. And to see that you are freshly pressed! Congrats! I loved your post on skating. Great blog! Vickie

    1. Thank you Vickie! I owe Cristy BIG. Like BIG, BIG. So big that I’m having trouble getting my arms around how big. She’s the best. I appreciate hopping by!

  33. Jerry Seltzer Avatar
    Jerry Seltzer

    Wonderful…..My dad owned a skating rink in Chicago and I loved going there……you may have the wrong impression of what today’s Roller Derby is, but many women in their 40s and 50s are now competing in this modern competitive version of the original game (how many: some 60,000 in 1184 leagues in 38 countries)….there is bound to be one near you……all amateur, great women! get in shape, try out, even if you haven’t skated in years!

    1. Jerry Seltzer Avatar
      Jerry Seltzer

      check out my skating memories at jerryseltzer.wordpress.com.

    2. I just loved that Roller Derby pic I posted, and I’d like to learn more. I get really cranky a couple of days a month and would love to knock someone’s teeth in and get away with it. Just kidding. Sort of. I’ll check out your blog for sure. Thanks!

  34. I recently hosted my daughter’s first sleepover for her 10th birthday. I taught the girls light as a feather, stiff as a board, how to dance a soul-train line and how to have fun without video games or TV. It was fantastic. Next time the girls are over i’m pulling out your playlist! Great post, thanks for sharing!

    1. Don’t wait CJ. Pull it out and dance while they’re all at school. That way you’ll have your moves DOWN before the next sleepover. Love the light as a feather, stiff as a board ref…we totally did the same thing at our sleepovers. Don’t forget the ouija board and seances at the next party. Thanks for commenting!

  35. Nice writing I liked your analogy “Skating, like life, is about balance. Make the wrong move and you’ll end up flat on your face. . . .” Bring back the 80s. Fun post.

    1. Thanks for the kind comment!

    1. Thank you. Love your gravatar pic!

  36. Thanks for sharing this. I love skating. Beautiful photography. Connie
    http://7thandvine.wordpress.com/

  37. Look at you girl all fresh pressed! yay!

    1. Thank you GF….it’s been a crazy day!

  38. This post freaked me out. My town too had a Skate World: same name, colors, same inside as the pictures you posted, only in a different town in the Midwest. Even the music, the activities, and the GALAGA (now a life-long obsession) you describe are exactly the same.

    1. Super cool though, right? I totally troll airport arcades for galaga and love to destroy my kids whenever we play. I’m all about tough love. Thanks for commenting!

  39. Awesome stuff. I find myself relating in so many ways. Thank you.

    1. Thank you for taking the time to comment!

  40. Such a wonderful resonance, and I would have never used that word, resonance, EVER at Skate World back then. Big smiles and empathy for your wondering about where your kids are going to find themselves away from you . . . which in my mind simply brought me closer in my own confidence to my ‘rents. Thanks for your story! ROCKS! Funny, we didn’t say that back then, either. LOL — or LOL, either . . . as we actually did, sometimes embarrasingly.

    Good stuff!

    1. Thank you. YOU totally rock, and I’m not ashamed to say it!

  41. anigglewriter Avatar
    anigglewriter

    Very Neat’o Love it!

  42. project1979 Avatar
    project1979

    Reblogged this on project1979.

    1. Thanks so much for reblogging!

  43. honeyryder512 Avatar
    honeyryder512

    Sounds exactly like my middle school experiences at the Skate World in my home town 🙂

    1. I think there might have been a Skate World in every hometown. Yay!

  44. good news is that i can relate 100% to all this. the music, skating, emotions, video games, everything.

    bad news is that it all means you’re about my age.

    sorry.

    1. Awwww, there’s no bad news there. I celebrate my 29th birthday every year! Try it!

  45. I love roller skating (on 4 wheels). I bought my first pair of roller skates at age 28 as part of a Halloween costume, I loved it so much that I’ve continued to go to the roller rink once or twice a month. I’ve even managed to convince some of my friends to re-capture their youth and join me over the years. Thanks for sharing your views, growing up these days is not like it used to be!

    1. Now download the playlist and skate in your creepy basement to get the full effect. Thanks for commenting!

  46. YAY! Another gemini blogger! Love your style!

    1. Love that you’re a Gemini. Thanks so much for your comment!

  47. WooHoo! Thanks for the memories. I more than worry a little for my kids as well and I am deeply saddened by the superficiality and shallowness that protects the now foggy definition of friendship. Great post!

    1. Thanks for sharing your thoughts Karen, I appreciate it. =)

  48. Loved this one also and it really struck a chord with lots of people! Dad knew when he dropped you off that he had to leave quickly!! But then………he rode around the block and made another pass just to make sure you were safely inside with the other skaters!! And I did say “safely” inside with other skaters. Times have changed…..
    Love,
    Mom

    1. What? Dad was totally busting my street cred. I knew something was up. Love ya, Mom.

  49. reinaldobanh Avatar
    reinaldobanh

    Enjoying Your Speedy World!:)

    1. Thanks for taking the time to stop by!

    2. Thanks for taking the time to comment and reblog. I appreciate it!

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