Diaries Magazine

Just Call Me The Anti-Prank -

Posted on the 15 May 2014 by Juliejordanscott @juliejordanscot
Typical 1970's bedroom. Mine didn't look like this, but it sort of sets the tone. Typical 1970's bedroom. Mine didn't look like this, but it sort of sets the tone.

I almost didn't participate this week in BiteSize Memoir, but decided just to throw this out there even amidst not wanting to throw it out there. Usually when I do this I find great rewards, even at solely the personal level.

Our prompt from the Bitesize Memoir Challenge from Lisa Reiter  this week:

Jinks: Childish, playful, often noisy and rowdy activities, usually involving mischievous pranks.

Japes: Tricks or practical jokes or even perhaps, gags or shenanigans.

   Preface: I am the wet-towel of pranks and practical jokes. I literally abhor them. April 1 is a day I frown upon and I often tell my friends to be careful with pranking their children. This prank was done not with any malice intended at all, I was just a very tender child who hid much of that tenderness behind a smile. I still do, actually. With that said, here are almost 150 words on the topic. Happy Memoir Writing!

There is something very comforting in the way a sheet drawn tight around my feet and pulled up to my chin feels. It is a non-language feeling of deep love, perhaps reminiscent of the swaddling of babyhood.

My child-world was briefly set on its end long ago when an April Fool’s Prank turned into a moment of quiet terror.

It sounds absurd now. I remember smiling as tears burned. I looked to my sister and my mother who were smiling wider than normal, holding back laughter. Why were they laughing when a basic comfort like putting my feet into my bed was suddenly impossible? This was one of the few places I could trust. It was a spot I knew the best: the comfort and safety stretching out my feet.

The panic I felt was the genesis for my anti-prank stance. No harm was meant. I was just a weird kid.

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Julie Jordan Scott is a writer, creative life coach, speaker, performance poet, Mommy and mixed-media artist  whose Writing Camps and Writing Playgrounds permanently transform people's creative lives. Watch for the announcement of new programs coming Spring, 2014 and beyond. 

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