Tis the month of July and you know what that means don’t
you? FIREWORKS! Don’t you just love fireworks? Even now, when I see the firework stands
being set up around the city, I can’t help but to smile and chuckle to myself while
reminiscing about some really fun times with my family especially as a young
boy.
I remember saving all the money I could just so I could go
buy fireworks. I would even ask my Mom
and Dad for extra jobs around the house just so I could spend it on–what I would call with my five year old jargon–"those things that
go pop.” It’s hard for me to describe
the excitement I would experience as a young boy. Probably the closest thing to
lighting and watching fireworks for me, would be the same excitement one feels as a
child at Christmastime.
Some of my favorite
fireworks were actually some of the most simple. The “poppers“, the “snaps” or
“pop-its” are what I knew them by. It
truly is one of the only fireworks you can buy that doesn’t incorporate a lit
match or lighter in order to have some fun.
You simply take one out of the bag and throw it on the ground and it
creates a really loud "pop!"
I will never forget that my first victim was a woman in a light
blue dress and wearing glasses who was standing at the corner of Broadway and
Yellowstone in my hometown of Idaho Falls. If I remember correctly, I think I
was about twelve years old at the time, which would place us in the early
eighties with this particular memory. My sister and I were very
stealth in the planning of our attack. It was the plan, since this was our
first attack, to wait until the traffic light turned green to allow us to
proceed through the intersection without getting caught and fire the artillery
as we slowly passed the lady on the corner.
As the light turned green and as we proceeded forward, the
beads of sweat running down my brow from the anticipation of the woman’s
reaction and the laughter we were going to experience, got the best of me. I had grabbed five snap-its out of the bag and
as I was about to throw them out of the window, two out of the five dropped down
inside of the vehicle I was in and popped as I simultaneously tossed the
remaining three out of the window.
If there was such a thing as slow motion video back then and if I had been fortunate enough to have captured this moment in time, I’m sure I would
have at least twenty million views on YouTube due to the level of hilarity that accompanied this action. Needless to say, I screamed, my
sister screamed and the woman on the sidewalk screamed and jumped.
To this day, I am not sure the woman screamed and jumped because I screamed
while I was passing her or if it was my pop-its that did the trick? I certainly wasn't going to turn around and ask her. So as we continued to drive on, it was my own mistake that provided the entertainment for my sister and I this day. This was definitely another fun moment in
my life in which I had to just laugh at my stupidity, yet creative and curious
nature as a young boy.
But putting all kidding and reminiscing aside, and while you are experiencing all
the fun with family, the parades, the picnics and yes, the amazing firework
displays that you, your family or the cities you live in put on every 4th of
July, don’t forget WHY we are able to have the freedoms we do. I saw a VIDEO recently that I would HIGHLY recommended you watch. If you have just one minute of your life to watch this, you will find yourself not being able to turn away during the remaining five minutes. In the video, there is a young North Korean woman who explains what her life was like under a dictator's rule. She literally risked and lost everything, including her family during her journey thus far in life, but finally gained a simple thing that she always wanted that most of us, including me, take for granted at times–her freedom! I
cannot corroborate the validity or the veracity of this video, but if even a
fraction of what she says is true, we are indeed a lucky nation and people.
HAPPY 4th OF JULY!
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