Good morning Sweet Naomi,
What fabulous photos. I have none of my childhood (I don't think), I think they are all tucked away in photo albums at my parent's house.
Anyway, our stories are pretty similar - allowing for Hollywood and all that jazz!
cq
Here from Michele's this morning...
It is very interesting to read about the youth of another person coming from another continent ! We have two things in commun, I were very romantic too (and still are, but less, life told me) and I also wonder how I made it through high school ! I were awfully bad and considered all my teachers as useless bugs they were all awful and I didn't like anyone of them.
Of course you were a teenager in 47 and I ten years later. Lucky me that it was not in 47 because at that time whole Germany was still in ruins and Frankfurt and Bonn were I lived were destroyed at 80 % that's why I lived with my grand parents in a small town on the country side. I remember playing in basements of ruins and sometimes we found a doll or something else. But in 57 it was already different and then we moved in 59 to Brussels. And the first time I took an airplane, I were 23 and this was exceptionally early for a young girl. I have been 2 x in Los Angeles/Holywood in 1994 and 96 and found it very special and quite artificial, I like your description from early Los Angeles better !
Good morning.
I always love your stories and can't wait to hear more.
I had a rought time at school too and although my parents never separated I always wish they would as they rowed all the time. I had no friends at school so all I had was my school work so I threw myself into it as if I could hide. The worst year I got a straight A report card!
I really do laugh when I hear that phrase 'School days are the best days of your life'!
I'm here from Michele's this time but as ever I would have popped by anyway!
I love so much to read your teenager's memories, Naomi! I was very romantic and I liked to fantasized, too. And it's great that you have those lovely photos!
Have a good Sunday!
That was a very both lovely and sad story. I am amazed on people like you who still after many many years have pictures still to show. Very few give value to these things. I for one do value a lot of pictures. I find it hard to discard it so I just put it in a box if not in an album.
I'm sorry to hear that you were not a happy teenager. You don't seem to be. You seem to be a very vibrant person with no traces of that. You amaze me on how you have surpassed them.
Loved your story and pictures! LA must have been so nice at that time. Neighborly in a way that is lost today with the high rises.
I love those black and white photos. For some reason, they just seem to capture the candidness of life so much better. They seem so much more authentic...to me, anyhow. I always love hearing about your childhood, sad as it may have been. I know that had so much to do with who you are today, and I find it so interesting!! Great pictures.
LOL! How you can make failing school sound like a GOOD thing is beyond me! ROFL! I'm glad you DID finally graduate though... you DID didn't you? LOL... guess I have to wait for THAT story! Your poor Ms. Thorne does sound like a sad case... but makes for a good story!
I was a high school teen in the late 60's and I think my only "candid" picture was one my mom took of me asleep with one of those bouffant hair driers on my head. Back in the days of soup can curlers, before Farrah Fawcett. Strange days indeed.
I was a high school teen in the late 60's and I think my only "candid" picture was one my mom took of me asleep with one of those bouffant hair driers on my head. Back in the days of soup can curlers, before Farrah Fawcett. Strange days indeed.
I often wonder about the teachers from my childhood, what motivated them, whether they were happy or sad. When I was a kid, these things never occurred to me. Of course, now they do, and it's too late for me to do anything about it. I have no pictures, only fuzzy memories.
Thanks for the vivid recollections, Naomi. Your sense of history makes you such a wonderful person to read.
if it makes you feel better i failed Geometry too! lol.. but never had to go to summer school.
would you believe that I still have contact with one of my HS teachers! He was one of my favorite teachers since I had him in Jr. High and then HS Biology and Home room.
oh, how i hated geometry! i had to have a tutor for it, too. i enjoyed your "reminiscing". i've been going through old photos and plan to do some similar posts soon.
Hi! Thanks for stopping by! It was really nice to reda about you and your childhood. I will be back to read the rest
Here from micheles this morning! :D
Wow...you have such an interesting life...I am constantly amazed. :)
You were very pretty in those pictures...
I cannot imagine sitting for twelve hours..ugh.
It was bad enough when Scott and I flew to Paris...what a horrible flight.
And I was dressed comfortably!
Kendra
In some ways high school seems like yesterday and in other ways a life time. I wouldn't go back that is for sure! Maybe I should do a big hair 80's MAdonna style candid shot for my blog!!!
I love your pictures and your story...though sad about those women. Very sad. In some ways I wish we dressed up more for things now....not the airplane rides of course but our culture doesnt' dress up for much of anything anymore...even funerals!
Wow, what great photos, what a great post.
To answer your question you left on my blog: Early Intervention is run by the NYS board of health. Since my daughters were diagnosed with PDD-NOS (a lesser form of autism), EI provides us with in-home therapy services that will enable them to be ready for pre-school - speech therapy, physical & occupational therapy and special ed, to be exact - thanks for asking!
What a fun post. I love your pictures. :) It's funny, of all the time (the usual 4 years), I didn't make very many friends. I just focused on school work, I guess. I was an okay student as long as I liked my teacher. Hated my poetry teacher, flunked that class. Weird how that worked, eh?
Naomi, one of my best friends (from one of the 26 other schools I attended) had the same kind of problems, so her parents sent her to France for a year. She returned eager to study and learn, and could REALLY speak and understand French, not just have credit for it.
It makes me so mad when bad teachers and academic fatheads squeeze the joy of learning out of kids, making them feel defeated and nervous before they even start.
Right now, a friend's 25 year old son is drifting along like "Marty", holding a job, but doing nothing. He aspired to becoming an archetect, but a nasty college counselor had the gaul to tell him he was not "college material", so he dropped out. He's very art-oriented, has a critical eye, and design sense, but tries to supress all that good stuff because he has been convinced he has no potential by someone who has far less potential for any constructive endeavor than he has.
I rescued several dozen of his art and design books from the dumpster,where he tossed them as an act of defeat. I put them away, for the day (hopefully) when he recovers from the drubbing he got from that *&^%%.
I love reading your reminicences (I hope that's how you spell it!) and your insights of others, you are such a perceptive lady and I get so much out of reading your posts!
And yes, I can see the sadness too in your teacher's eyes; it's funny how much we romanticise things as teenagers, isn't it?
Indeed those romantic stories from the teenager perspective are anything but romantic in reality... I often wonder about my own grandmothers, if they were truly happy or just lead the life the environment told them to lead...
I was a good student and that's why I keep taking classes, lol! off to my French class now.
Thank you for sharing your high school memories with us. We have all been having a wonderful time, reminiscing, and reading others reminisces. One thing i have learned is that no matter the social class, priviledge, year or even who the person turned out to be in later years, high school was hard on everyone. Also, did you know that you were beautiful even then?
Its been a fun experience sharing, and i hope more folks pick up the high school days challenge.
I don't even know if I could FIND a candid picture of myself from high school.
Although I should go digging for older photos. You never know who'll want to see them in the future.
Naomi, I could sit and read your blog for days and days. WHEN are you going to write a book?? You have so many interesting stories! I love "old" Hollywood. The 'real' Hollywood as far as I'm concerned. I was born in 1962 and even by then it had changed greatly.
Today, getting a private tutor like you had would cost an arm and a leg. I know because I wanted to get one for my son. Please, more pictures! I love 'em.
Do you ever look at those old photos and think "if only the photographer and tilted the camera down just a little bit so we could see what was going on"? lol! As always, a fascinatin insight into your life. Thank you so much for sharing these stories with us!
Another interesting story, Naomi, and photos to match. I will have to go through some more photos and do this about me (but mine won't be as much fun to read as yours are)!
I just love old pictures and reading about your memories. I always feel nostalgic for the past and saddened sometimes by how much things change. I would have loved to see Hollywood with the little houses before all the apartments were developed. As for your grades and the teenage years, most of us went through hell in our teen years. I hope it makes us a little more compassionate, but no guarantees there. I actually went to a different high school each of my four years of high school, one in NY, two on opposite sides of Charlotte, NC and one in TX, talk about feeling alone. It's not easy being the new kid every year, and no, I'm not a military brat, just an IBM brat. ;-)
That was interesting and neat pictures. I have hardly any from those years and not sure why. I didn't have a lot of social activity given I was a country kid; so no pics with other friends at all. The only one of me at the high school Prom was taken by my date's parents and I never even saw a copy of how it turned out. I guess high school years were hard for a lot of people.
That was a fun ride down memory lane. Isn't it funny how we fill in the blanks and how impressionable we all are when we're young? You had a good imagination and an exciting life it seems to me. I'm glad it all turned out well...that you found yourself and your talents!
I really enjoyed reading this post. What great memories you have and I think you were probably right on the mark with Miss Thorne. So many women experienced that kind of sadness....waiting for that one great love of their life to be with them....and normally, it just never happened.
Oh Naomi - I love this post :) It is fantastic to hear about your life. 12 hours to fly coast to coast and it was a miracle. I was thinking this morning about how many things have happened in the last few years that we could have never imagined and what will life be like for my granchildren who are 11, 7 and 2 ....... always love to visit. Take care.
I enjoyed your school days and pictures. I am sorry about your parents at 10 years old, for you! I would have been devastated had it been my parents! My parents were the best and I could not have imagined one without the other! We had star charts for chores and good behavoir in my home and we even had a meeting every week where we... my parents, my three brothers and I came together to air grievances and tell of our accomplishments in school and such. Dad had a judges wooden gavel(that I still have out setting next to their portrait) to call the meetings to order every week and I was the secretary and kept the minutes as soon as I was old enough to take that job from my mother. I loved those meetings. Except when I knew that a grievance was about to be lodged against me, ha, ha! Oh and my dad was the handsomest man in all of the town we grew up in. In high school, I think I had so many friends because they wanted to just come look at my father. He had that rouge look about him, that even my daughter sighs over. My Mother and father are gone now and I miss them greatly! While I looked through to find my school pictures as you did, I even ran across their old love letters aand I read every one, again!
I don't think you could tell a boring story if they promised you a million dollars. Then again, you're a actress at heart, you might be able to if you were "in character." ;)
A 12 hour flight from CA to NY?
Holy Toledo. I am not going to complain about Europe flights! Oy.
Interesting about your tutor.
And the subjects.
French seemed to come so naturally to me. But the teacher will make or break you, I think.
~S :)
What great photos and memories!! My mother made me wear a girdle when I was TWELVE.
I ditched it, AND MY BRA, at 15!
Name: OldOldLady Of The Hills
Location: Los Angeles, California