Hello:
They say you can't remember anything till around four or five. I dunno. What is your earliest memory and how old were you.. I remember seeing the big fire on Colfax Ave in 1945 when I was two. Of course, as mentioned earlier, I remember a sexy manikin when I was three.
excon
Now that you mention it, Livvie, I believe I’ve heard of that phenomenon before: people having memories of being in the womb. I agree with you, Jane S, that it sounds fascinating.
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“Mind” the nurses?
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I don’t know how old I was, but since my younger brother is in this memory, and he’s thirteen months my junior, I must have been about three or four years old, because he was already walking and running. I remember the exterior of the apartment house we lived in, it was painted white, it was one story high and there may have been about five or six apartments in a row. Ours was not on either of the ends, and the whole length of the grassy front yards consisted of a big hill that fed right to the street. We were only allowed to play on the top of the hill and not on the slope because of the cars whizzing by below.
My elder brother, younger brother and I were with a bunch of other kids running around playing, and I remember being absolutely terrified of the hill because it seemed so steep to me. We feared getting close to the edge where the slope began, we thought we’d roll down it and wouldn’t be able to stop, ending up getting hit by cars. We were in awe of older children and adults who had no fear of the hill at all.
It was a cold winter day, my little brother’s nose was running and he didn’t seem to care because he was having so much fun, I thought, “What a big baby”. A few seconds later, my mother or my sister (four years older than I) yelled at both of us from the front door of our house to clean our noses. I guess my nose was running too and I hadn’t even noticed it. LoL.
Side note: we only lived in that house a year or two, and I have lots of other memories there after the one above. We moved to another part of town far from there, and over the years lived in three separate places before I turned eighteen and joined the Marine Corps. I have never again lived in my hometown from that day on, but as an adult, I traveled back there on leave many times. On one such trip, I went back to where we lived in the story above. The apartment homes were still there, everything that had seemed enormous to me as a two-year-old seemed like miniatures to me then, especially the “killer hill”. It was no more intimidating than a stair step, but I could see how a tiny children would be afraid of it.
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