We all had those moments in childhood that were pure magic. Moments that were full of wonder that brought us great joy. Sometimes those memories are connected with music or certain fragrances. This thread is for the purpose of sharing your memorable childhood whimsical experiences.
I don't remember a time during my childhood that I didn't go at life with gusto. I was the five year old swinging up through the air at the playground, singing Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer at the top of my lungs. It's hard to single out just one memory.
When I was five, I recall being told by my mother that we were going to go see a Mardi Gras parade that evening. We lived in Mobile, Alabama, the home of the first Mardi Gras celebrations. (They later brought it to New Orleans.) I had not been to a parade before and this was my introduction to Mardi Gras.
My older siblings explained what a parade was. We jumped up and down screaming, "Goody, goody gumdrops!!" And then began the several hour countdown to the parade. That wait seemed more like years. Finally, armed with brown grocery bags for the candy, necklaces, doubloons, toys, etc. of which we planned to catch a bounty, we found ourselves on a city street corner. The sun had already set. We threw spirals of colorful serpentine paper in the air. The gorgeous floats went by and we scrambled to catch our loot.
Then a float stopped right in front of us. And there he was: Louis Armstrong. He was maybe 10 feet away, if that. He smiled his amazingly huge smile, I've never seen one to rival it, and looked right at us. Then someone said, "Mobile, we give you Mr. Louis Armstrong!" He began to sing "Hello, Dolly!" and of course he played his trumpet. I had never felt such charisma and magic coming from one person in my life. I was spellbound, as was everyone else. I fell in love with the performer and am a fan to this day. Now Andy and my two grandsons are fans as well. The boys ask me to play Louis for them as they fall off to sleep.
I also fell in love with Mardi Gras, which sadly I have not been to since our family moved from SE Louisiana in 1970. I understand that Mobile still puts on a fabulous week of Mardi Gras balls, parties and parades. The crowds aren't as huge as the ones in Pre-Katrina NOLA. I hope to head down there some time. May Mr. Louis rest in peace.
Please share some happy childhood memory. It could be as simple as picking honeysuckles, the way they smelled and tasted, the first time someone showed you that you could suckle the nectar... It could be buying your first 45 record. Mine was Eleanor Rigby/Yellow Submarine.