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Roll On

  • 4 hours ago
  • 2 min read

I was not an athletic kid.  When my classmates chose teams, I wasn’t the last one picked for volleyball, but they picked me just before the kid with the thick glasses and the very short one. You get the picture. I was the kid whose mother had to make her go outside to play. Left to my own devices, I’d have my nose in a book when I wasn’t sleeping or eating.

But somehow, I discovered roller skating and I was actually good at it! By the way, I define good as staying vertical most of the time and not breaking an ankle. Something about the rhythm of the movement and the speed appealed to me.


Recently, I was comparing notes with my granddaughter, who was amazed I didn’t have shoe skates.  The only place I had access to shoe skates was at the roller rink, where I was only allowed to go with my church youth group. My friend, however, had a snazzy white pair with navy and white pom-poms.  But she was from the West Coast, after all. 


My home-grown friends and I had the metal clamp-on skates which attached to our shoes and adjusted with a skate key. I wore my key on a string around my neck, ready for adjustments. Remember how the skates came off your shoes when you fell? Then you had to widen the skate clamps, put your shoed foot back in and tighten them up. They were adjustable for length, too.  No need to buy more as your foot grew.  Perfect for frugal Mid-Westerners.


I had favorite places to skate, too.  I liked the smooth, more recently poured concrete, as opposed to the old, rough stuff. Skating in the street was always fun, since several of us could skate together.  But only if our moms didn’t catch us!


I’ve seen modern inventions called “in-line skates” with one long blade down the center of the shoe. It’s good they weren’t around during my skating days. I wouldn’t be alive to write this.


I haven’t been on skates in years, but I still remember the feeling of freedom and success as I sailed along with the wind in my face, cooling me off on hot summer days—air conditioning, Old School style. 

 
 
 

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Kathy Bilello
3 hours ago
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

And the skating rink memories are strong in my mind… it was a special treat to go to a birthday party at the skating rink. And we never gave it a thought that we were all wearing shoes that had been worn by many kids before us!!

I’m told that the few skating rinks that have survived these many years in my hometown, still have the same smell- must be wood and leather.

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