Generational Interview
Samantha Ferry
GWS-2000-950
Dr. Brown
February 12, 2012
Her name, Sharon Lovelady, her age, 42, her childhood pretty
normal; for a white female in the 1970’s. Through talking to Sharon I
discovered that her childhood and life experiences have definitely shaped who
she is today. Through her experiences she has learned who she was, who she is,
and who she wants to be. We talked in detail about her childhood experiences,
and her ideas and future plans for herself. While reading her story you will
discover that she has had a pretty normal life. There were the ups, and then
the downs, but overall pretty normal for the ear in which she was born.
I have noticed that when someone
says “childhood experiences “, everyone gets a different image of what they
remember as being there childhood. You can ask two siblings in the same house
around the same age about their childhood and get two completely different
answers. So, I ask you, what is the first thing that comes to mind for you when
someone says childhood experiences? This
is what Sharon had to say. “The first thing that comes to mind when I hear
childhood experiences is Christmas. Having a big family meant lots of presents
from relatives. I had two nieces that were close to my age and we enjoyed
Christmas as there was so many new toys to play with. Then there were all the
cookies and candy and somebody always got a new sled. So, we all bundled up and
went out sledding until dark.” (Lovelady 2012)
Things have changed so much for
children from the 1970’s until now. “Back then we said the pledge of allegiance
every day at school, we went door to door collecting for Unicef, and we went
trick or treating alone until it got dark and we felt like stopping.” “Now
everything has to be so controlled because people no longer trust their
neighbors.” “I feel that this really gave me a sense of unity and community
when I was younger.” (Lovelady 2012)
There are three things she enjoyed
most about her childhood. They are camping with the family, the last day of
school, and the first day of spring. To most people this sounds like a pretty
typical childhood. There was only one experience in her childhood that sticks
out as negative, and she felt it could have been avoided. There was a house
fire in her neighborhood and the children involved blamed it on her. “I was
walking home and came up on these other kids playing with cat food and lighters
in the old abandoned house up the street. I decided not to stop and went
straight home. I should have said something to my mom but I didn’t and the
police showed up two hours later accusing me.” ‘If I had only said something
the house would still be there and I could have avoided a butt whooping.”
(Lovelady 2012)
To me this
sounds like a pretty normal childhood. But after reading “When I Was Growing
Up”, by Nellie Wong, I believe Sharon only had half the story. For Nellie her
childhood was completely different from Sharon’s. “ I know now that once I
longed to be white. How? You ask. Let me tell you the ways.”(Wong 1981) “When I
was growing up, people would ask if I were Filipino, Polynesian, Portuguese.
They named all colors except white, the shell of my soul, but not my dark,
rough skin.” (Wong 1981) I cannot imagine growing up this way. With people
constantly having to guess and ask what nationality I am. Here is a little more insight into the life
and childhood of Nellie Wong. “When I was growing up and went to high school, I
discovered the rich white girls, a few yellow girls, their imported cotton
dresses, their cashmere sweaters, their curly hair and I thought that I too
should have what these lucky girls had.” (Wong 1981) “When I was growing up, I
hungered for American food. American styles, coded: white and even to me, a
child born of Chinese was feeling foreign, as limiting, was un-American.” “I
know now that once I longed to be white. How many more ways? you ask. Haven’t I
told you enough?” (Wong 1981) So, as you can see these two girls have had a
completely different experience growing up. Sharon’s was pretty typical for a
white girl. Was Nellie’s typical for a Chinese girl?
In Claiming an Education” by
Adrienne Rich, it talks about our responsibility to ourselves. How we should
not necessarily always take the path destined for us. Make your own path.
Educate yourself and put yourself where you want to be. Demand the education
that is rightfully yours. Do not let anyone tell you for any reason that you
should not get one, or that you don’t deserve one. And make sure the education
you are getting is exactly what you expect. Do not let them be biased to you
for any reason. It is yours, you deserve it, now go take it. This is exactly
what Sharon is doing. She went to college shortly after college and because of
some life changes was not able to finish. She then moved and moved on with her
life believing she was happy with the way it was. You always hear these rumors
that people are too old to go back to school. That is what Sharon thought. It
had been so long since she had been to school she figured it would be too hard
for her. After some life changing things happened to her and her family, Sharon
decided she wanted to go back to be a psychologist. She wants to be able to
help others that may need her help. Against her better judgment of herself she
is now enrolled in classes and is doing great. School is difficult for everyone
at times, but if you hang in there and don’t give up you will be rewarded in
the end.
So, in the end, everyone is raised
differently. Everyone perceives their childhood as good or bad. But whatever
the case you can be anything you want to. Will it always be easy? No. Will it
always be handed to you on a silver platter as they say? No. You will have to
work for it. But the best things in life are not free.
References
Rich, Adrienne
Claiming an Education, 1979
Wong, Nellie
When I was Growing Up, 1981
Lovelady,
Sharon 2012
Samantha,
ReplyDeleteReading your interview with Sharon was interesting. It is crazy how you can ask a group of people what their childhood was like and how many different reactions you can get just from that one simple question. Sharon mentioned how when she was a child she could go out with just her friends and feel safe and it reminds me a lot of my childhood. Even though the neighborhood I grew up in wasn't the best neighborhood, my parents could still feel okay about letting us kids wander around the neighborhood with our friends, mostly because my parents knew a lot of the other people in it especially since it's the same neighborhood they grew up in. It's sad that today people have to be so protective of their children and be so careful about how far they can let them out of sight. I miss my old neighborhood from when I was a child. I really enjoyed reading your interview!
OOOPPPSSS I forgot Sharon's contact information sharonlovelady2003@yahoo.com
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