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. reinaldobanh Avatar
    reinaldobanh

    Reblogged this on reinaldobanh.

    1. Thanks for the reblog. I appreciate it!

  2. Lovely blog. Reading this brought back so many memories for me. So much so, I thought about writing my own blog about my “skate land’ experience, but I’m afraid it would look as though I copied your blog. lol I’m guessing many young women can relate to this entry. I can also relate to what you said about your oldest son. Mine will start middle school next year, and he too loves his call of duty. I often worry that he and my daughter are missing out. Like you said, I’m sure they will find something along the way that they’ll enjoy as much as I did skating. Thanks again. I really enjoyed the blog.

    1. Thanks for such a thoughtful comment. And as far as posting…write away! Any great memory is worth talking about. =)

  3. Oh I loved the roller skating rink. Some of the best Friday and Saturday nights of my adolesence were spent at Riverside Rollaway. Thats where I had my first kiss while Lean On Me by Club Nouveau played in the background. The building it used to occupy is now offices for Six Flags New England, which took over Riverside Park across the street. I cant say that the loss of the skating rink or the original amusement park has been an kind of improvement to my hometown. But thats just my opinion.

    The roller skating rink in my city where I live now is actually a pretty popular hangout for kids and teens. Surprising in this day and age.

    1. Good to hear that kids are still enjoying skating. Thanks for sharing your memories!

  4. Terrific! I remember holding hands with a boy named Dean at our jr. high class had its annual skate party. Still one of my fondest memories, and I thank you for bringing it back!

    1. I remember my first couples skate: Jason Miller. I don’t know who was more surprised that he asked me to skate…him or me. Thanks for the comment.
      =)

  5. I was convinced we could open a skating rink in the basement of the apartment we rented when I was a wee middle schooler. This all in spite of the fact that there was a huge landing you had to step over to complete the loop. I think I am just as foolishly optimistic today.

    Cheers!

    1. Yes, and sell popcorn and soft drinks and be the most popular girl on the planet. I shared your ambition. If we had known one another, we could have gone into business together. =) Thanks for taking the time to comment.

  6. I can’t love this enough. In my hometown it was the “Skate-A-Way” and I spent my middle school years there, got my first kiss there and had my heart broken there. I can’t imagine dropping my now-7-yr-old son off anywhere and leaving him for hours, but that’s what our parents did back then. I remember skating to “Centerfold” and “Shook Me All Night Long” and not even knowing what the songs were about. Those were the days of innocence and fun, real friends and true quality time together. Thank you for reminding me of a simpler time and place.

    1. Thank YOU for such a thoughtful comment. My dad wouldn’t let me buy the J Geils Band tape because of the song “Centerfold.” So I lifted it off the radio instead. The only problem was the annoying DJ at the beginning and end. No matter how many times I tried to record over him, I could never edit him out. =/

  7. I love the playlist! I’m dancing to sugarhill gang as I type just thinking about it. And don’t get me started on jesse’s girl. Awesome. I could blog similarly, but it would be Super Mario Brothers more than roller skating. And I would be a lot less cool. Gemini’s rule!

    1. Gemini totally rule (Gemini is the plural of Gemini)! Download the songs and let the memories fly. iTunes is cutting me in on every song. I wish.
      Thanks for your comment!

  8. Reblogged this on Apocalyptic dad's Brant and commented:
    I just love the playlist of classic songs. I’m going to mix these up on my ipod.

    1. Thanks for reblogging!

  9. I always get a sense of nostalgia when it comes to my childhood. Prior to our incredible technological advancements, we use to spend so much time being outdoorsy and active individuals. In our present environment it is quite the opposite. Everyone just wants to stay inside, hypnotized by our diverse set of screens at home. Take your pick: the TV screen, the computer screen, the ipod screen, the cell phone screen, the ipad screen. It’s funny to think that there is actually a “screen” impeding on our ability to enjoy the amazing qualities of our world outside of our four walls. I appreciate you taking the opportunity to share your heartfelt memories. Even as a twenty-one year old, it’s difficult for me and my friends to find activities to do, except going dancing at night. However, I would prefer going to a skating rink or taking a hike any day. It gives you more of an opportunity to socialize and get better acquainted with your friends (essentially it’s more personal), rather than being confined in a stuffy, crowded, and loud dancefloor. Even our local skating rink, which I use to go to when I was little, does not have as many people as it use to.

    Thank you for your post! Wish todays world was the way it used to be as you described it!

    If it’s alright with you, I started a blog of my own not too long ago and I would like to invite you and your readers to please check out my posts, comment, and subscribe! I would really appreciate any feedback as well as your support by signing up! The link is http://www.logicmeetsreason.wordpress.com Thank you so much!

    1. I’ll definitely check out your blog. Isn’t it strange that we are using….a screen to communicate? It’s interesting to hear your perspective. I just assumed your generation was cool with the way things are, because for you, it’s pretty much the way things have always been. It’s nice to hear that you long for a past that you sort of never had. Keep hiking and writing. Thanks for your thoughtful comment!

  10. Even farther back than you, my friends and I spent Friday nights at the ice rink, bundled in lots of layers but same skating scene.and yes, I think it was better when we were actually present with one another instead of hidden in the midst of our gadgets…

    1. We ice skate with our kids from time to time now. Totally fun in a different way. Thanks for your comment!

  11. I remember going to the rink the first time and being scared and unsure because I didn’t know how to skate. After that, my mom bought me my own pair of skates and I decided to teach myself to roller-skate. I was mostly scared of falling down… so I decided to teach myself to fall down on roller skates. I spent about a week outside after school (for hours each day) practicing falling down all different kinds of ways on my rollerskates. I got a little better at that (with all the practice), but mostly (and this was my important life lesson) I just lost my fear of falling. When I finally ventured out in the neighborhood some distance from the house on my skates it was actually not so hard to get the hang of skating. And after all the time spent on asphalt, chip-seal, and concrete with hills both up and down… well let’s just say the next time I went to a rink, instead of spending my time at the arcade afraid to get out there I ended up trying to skate backwards and flirt with girls. I did still enjoy the arcade, though.

    1. Flirting is a great reason to learn to skate. Middle school + hormones = willingness to take extra risk. Thanks for commenting and sharing your story!

  12. sarah@antidote_studio Avatar
    sarah@antidote_studio

    Awwww, man, skating in the creepy basement and trying not to trip on the drain cracked me up! Been there! What a thoughtful post. You’re right, we had it good! Congrats on Freshly Pressed, enjoy the ride! 🙂

    1. Thanks for your kind comment. I’m still pinching myself wondering when I’m gonna wake up. =)

  13. This post made me smile from ear to ear. From about the age of 12 until I was able to drive, ever single Friday Night, Saturday Night and Sunday afternoon after church was spent at the Skating Rink. There was absolutely NOTHING that would come between me, my friends, and my skates. It was something that I always LOVED!

    After getting my drivers license the love for skating soon fizzled out, or so I thought. Maybe it just wasn’t the coolest thing to do after you were able to actually drive other places on the weekends!

    From the time I turned 16 until my junior year of college, I maybe stepped foot in a skating rink about two times and those times were only to take my little brother for him to do those same things I did when I was his age. Enjoy the rink and friends all in a safe place that allowed a little bit of freedom from the parents!! However I noticed that every single time I dropped him off, I found myself wanting more and more to grab a pair a skates and hit the rink too.

    My senior year of college I couldn’t take it anymore. When I would make the long drive back to my hometown on Thursdays to start my weekendI couldnt WAIT to spend my Thursday night back home with my brother at the skating rink and whats even better is not only did I join my little brother on Thursday Family Skate night, Both our mom and dad joined in too!!!

    Skating brought our close-knit little family even closer and I LOVE it!!!

    GREAT POST

    1. Love this! Thank you for taking the time to share such a fond family memory. All of my kids are in elementary school, but I’ve taken them a few times too. EVERYTHING is the same. Love the way that makes me feel.

  14. I had a pretty bad experience at a skating rink when I was a kid. It wasn’t the skating, really, it was a couple of bullies from my school who happened to find their way behind me in the limbo line. I never went back… until my twenties, where I was recruited into and helped start a new roller derby team. Being president of the league, the politics of it all really turned me off, but the skating… that made it worth it for a while. I quit the team and moved, and haven’t skated much since.

    I think you’ve just inspired me to go back to skating. Thank you for that.

    1. Thank you Maddie, for sharing your story. I’m glad you’re thinking about giving it another try. =)

  15. mommywritervkent Avatar
    mommywritervkent

    Excellent blog! Enjoyed the tone and overall it’s a great read.

    1. Thanks for stopping by and taking the time to comment!

  16. emjayzed Avatar
    emjayzed

    You write beautifully and bought back a flood of my memories from my “skate world” journey! Thank you x

    1. Thank you for your kind comment!

  17. Oh my, I was freaking out. Like: Angela, is it you? Angela Peters?

    But then I googled Skate World and they are all over.

    I think you had some very innocent times at Skate World. I did not. In fact, we did smoke and various innocent illusions I had were utterly shattered at Skate World.

    But the song list–exactly right!

    1. OMG, you must have been at an evil Skate World. Do you live in Jersey? JUST KIDDING! I was so busy trying to look cool skate-standing that I didn’t have time for anything else. Sorry your dreams were shattered at evil Skate World. Next time, come to my side of town. =)

  18. Nice one !!!!!!

  19. Neat post! I especially loved the playlist. Great mix for a retro evening.

    1. I’m gonna go a step further and claim that the Skate World playlist is great for anything! Driving around on a Saturday evening with your bestie? “The Freaks Come Out at Night.” Out in the creepy countryside and your car breaks down? “Another One Bites the Dust.” Stalking someone who thinks you’re a total loser? “I Want You to Want Me.” I could go on and on and on….thanks for commenting!

  20. I get a bit of nostalgia everytime I look at roller skates. It isn’t the same anymore 😦

    1. It definitely smells the same. That fake cheesette nacho aroma is woven into the wall-carpet fibers. Thanks for commenting!

  21. lotterydotnet Avatar
    lotterydotnet

    I miss the days of roller skates!

    1. Don’t miss them, bring them back!

  22. I haven’t skated for years, but I did quickly discover that being bad at it, really wasn’t a bad thing. Girls seem to love a guy who will have a go but who is prepared to look a complete tit. And if you fall over and hurt yourself, you’re bound to get looked after.
    Great blog post.
    sev x

    1. Right. Making a complete fool out of yourself can have its advantages. As long as you don’t risk injury. That’s a line I’m not prepared to cross.

  23. Thank you for taking the time to share such a fond family memory.I maybe stepped foot in a skating rink about two times and those times were only to take my little sister for her.

    1. Go back! Thanks for commenting… =)

  24. I loved rollar and ice skating! We used to go to the rollar disco at the local leisure centre 🙂

    1. Why is there a “used to” in your post? Go back and feel the roller love! Thanks for commenting. =)

  25. Great Post

  26. Such a lovely post this is!
    So true you are when you say that friendship in those days was organic and real compared to the kind of facebook friendships that we now believe in!
    Kudos!

    1. There has to be a fine line somewhere that smart people like you can figure out. How do we stay technologically connected, without which, this blog wouldn’t exist, and not sit and stare at a screen all day? Thanks for the thoughtful comment!

  27. crazybingogirly Avatar
    crazybingogirly

    oh how I miss my roller-skating days as a child!

    1. Then relive them! Thanks for the comment!

  28. Same as the other comments…. This brought me back down memory lane. It’s funny because I have 2 daughters hitting the exact age you are talking about. I have a 6th and 8th grader. Texting, facetime, etc… are dominate. I can’t find a skate rink in NW Houston that is safe enough for a drop off. Drugs are everywhere. You brought back memories of a safer time. Great blog.

    1. Change is the only thing we can count on in life, but it’s really sad when it goes the wrong way. Thanks for your thoughtful post….

  29. I love the row of dinosaurs. I used to have so many of those as a child.

    1. I AM the dinosaur, which is kind of cool because I’m supposed to be extinct. Thanks!

  30. Reblogged this on Apocalyptic dad’s Brant

    1. Thanks for taking the time to reblog!

  31. A story so wonderfully put together taht it was impossble to peel my eyes off the screen. It felt so close as if I had known you forver and that’s such a rare experience in the world where we have million online friends and do not know the names of our neighbors.

    Forwarded your article for my best friends to read. 🙂 Thank you for sharing!

    http://dressupforme.wordpress.com/

    1. First of all, if that’s you in the gravatar pic, I want your back muscle definition. Hope that’s not a super creepy thing to say, but wow! Secondly, thanks for the thoughtful comment. I met my blogging bestie by reading her stuff on Freshly Pressed and totally identifying with it. Then I stalked her online and we hit it off. More on that in tomorrow’s post, though. Thanks for sharing and for forwarding my blog! 🙂

  32. Takes me back to my days at Skateland USA and Sportsworld! Thanks so much for bringing back some awesome memories! In fact, had my first real kiss at the skating rink!

    1. I got my first kiss in 5th grade. Now before you start thinking, “Wow. She’s a little _ _ _ _, I didn’t initiate it and it was more of a slobber-hug than anything else. Glad you have fond memories of yours and thanks for sharing!

  33. Skates! I love to see people skating. They are like “free-birds” gliding and soaring. It relaxes my eyes whenever I see people skating! I really love it. I hope I’ll learn how to use skates!

    Can anyone help me?lol

    1. Just strap on and push off, you’ll get the hang of it. Thanks for commenting!

      1. Haha! That’s a fast lesson! Thanks for replying!

  34. Bloody hell…that was me. Bang on, pics and everything.

  35. This is really great. I love when I find talented writers with real things to say.

    ” 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.”

    I couldn’t agree more.

    1. Thanks Simon. Your thoughtful comment gave me goosebumps, which when you’re scared, is horrible, but when you’re happy, is awesome. I’m happy. =)

  36. I need all the help I can get on skates nowadays, so thanks!

  37. I used to roller skate at Skate World in Traverse City, Michigan, and it was exactly as you described it, but I also remember dancing in the middle of the rink to Knock on Wood and YMCA 🙂 Thanks for sharing your reflections–a very fun post, and congrats on being FP. Wonderful blog!

    1. Thanks Chrissine! I’m still not sure how this FP thing happened, but I’m rolling with it (get it, rolling with it?)? =p

  38. gooooldddddddd

  39. When I realized the skating rink in my hometown had closed I was incredibly sad. Where will my girls go now? I wish they could have the memories I have of that place – my grandmother taking all of my cousins and I every Saturday from 6 until 8, birthday parties, learning to skate, then to rollerblade….

    1. I know. It’s hard to figure out what will/can/could replace it. My son wants to go to “kids night out” at the rec center this Friday, but I’ve heard from other parents that the kid-to-kid entertainment isn’t always in the “G” category. He’s 11. So I’m saying no, which bums me out because I want to allow him the experience I had (although not for a couple of years). So let’s keep looking, or better yet open our own Skate Worlds! Thanks for commenting.

  40. There was NOTHING like the skating rink in middle school. Good times!

  41. I did this same activity for a number of years although I fear my experience wasn’t quite as innocent. I was innocent but I do remember kids going into the bathroom to do something thing coming out acting like idiots. Later I found out my friends were smoking pot but didn’t want to tell me about it. I also remember being 12 years old and being pinned to a wall by a 22 year old man trying to kiss me. At the time I was a little flattered and a little afraid, now I’m wondering why the heck a 22 year old would be hanging around with preteens on Friday night? All this being said it was really fun and I have to say I received my first real kiss at a booth in the skating rink. Also, after reading this I’d kinda like to go skating this weekend.

    1. I’m not so naive to think that there isn’t the possibility of non-innocent stuff happening, and I can sort of see the scenario of a 22 year old pinning you against the wall to kiss you (horrors). There were these twin guards at Skate World (Roger and Randy?) who had way too much facial hair to be any age less than 20. That’s creepy. But I stayed away from them and honestly, I didn’t know of anything “bad” happening when I was there. Everyone I knew just hung out and had a great time. 8th grade was still a pretty innocent age back in the Mesozoic Era though, and by high school we had graduated to other venues. =(
      Thanks for posting such a personal, thought-provoking comment. =/

  42. Congrats on getting freshly pressed. Great story. I swear – I remember this. How funny – all these “different worlds” that were exactly the same. You made me believe in a parallel universe!

    1. You never know. I discovered my blogging bestie, paltrymeanderings.com, through the whole parallel universe feeling of reading her blog. Then I stalked her and she actually responded rather than calling the wordpress police. Thanks for your comment. =)

  43. hello, stacie,

    i like the light way you narrated the period and its moods… and yes, i remember Jordache jeans, my older sisters wore them. also, there’s something about those alleys and shoe racks that promote camaraderie and growing up. haha. my experiences were in bowling alleys, though.

    thanks for sharing and goodluck with parenthood and its growing pains. ^^ 🙂

    1. Wait, if your older sister wore Jordache, then you are younger than me. That bums me out. JUST KIDDING! Thanks for your thoughtful comment, and I’ll take all the luck that comes my way in the parenting department. =)

  44. My step-mom use to take me and brother’s skating on Saturdays. My wife is an avid skater, and she loves it.

    Great post!

    1. Good to know that your stepmom was nice. I had, like, four of them, and they were all super-cool. Thanks for the comment!

  45. Wow! I love your style of writing! 🙂

  46. So true, how the world has changed 🙂

    1. Is that your six-pack on your gravatar? Have you had children? Are you bionic? Wow!
      Thanks for stopping by! =)

  47. Congrats on the FP Stacie!

    1. Thank you Laura! Cristy’s bestie karma rubbed off…which I’ll be writing about tomorrow. You never know who will be next…. =)

  48. Your post brought back so many memories. Although, my Skate USA experience happened a few decades later, the lessons learned were just the same. Instead of Rapper’s Delight we glided along to Gangster’s Paradise and on our feet were streamlined rollerblades, which I still don’t know how to stop in gracefully.

    I have been ice skating recently with my younger siblings, but I don’t know of a single Skating rink still up and running in my area.

    1. A few decades? How old do you think I am? jj.
      I love, love, love Gangster’s Paradise: Coolio, right? Thanks for stopping by and making me feel old. (Again jj). =)

  49. Skate Deck memories are cherished. Thanks for the reminder!

    1. Thanks for your comment!

  50. I too like skating. I tried practicing skating couple of years ago and left it with no success. Thought, maybe it is not my school.

    TechSmartLife

    1. Don’t give up! Thanks for visiting my site and commenting. =)

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