Thursday, March 20, 2025

The Second Tuesday of Next Week

The International
Date Line

While I was growing up, my mother was known for using interesting turns of phrase.  She would talk about the "oneth of the month" (the first day of the month).  She and my father both used Spoonerisms deliberately, so we saved Chublip Stamps instead of Blue Chip Stamps and ate chotato pips instead of everyday potato chips.  One of my favorites, though, was my mother threatening to knock us into the second Tuesday of next week when we were being, um, precocious.  But, of course, there is no second Tuesday of the week.

Until there was!

When my family moved to Australia in 1971, we flew on a Pan Am 747 and crossed over the International Date Line.  When we did that, the day we lost was a Tuesday.

When we returned to the United States in 1973, we took a Greek cruise ship, and of course we had to cross the International Date Line again.  On that trip across the date line, we happened to repeat a Tuesday.  So not only did we make up for the Tuesday we lost, we finally had the second Tuesday of next week!

And yes, we gave my mother a bunch of crap about all the times she had said that to us.  She had somehow finally succeeded in knocking us into the second Tuesday of next week.

Unfortunately, my parents have both passed away, and neither my brother nor I remember the specific Tuesday we repeated.  But we know we came back in March, and the Tuesdays in March 1973 were 6, 13, 20, and 27.  So I picked today to write about it.

And I am pretty sure my mother would love the fact that I still remember.

10 comments:

  1. That is a great story, Janice! Love it. Fun recollections. I think your mom would get a kick out of knowing you remember too.

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    1. Thank you, Nancy! Documenting my personal history in little snips and bites.

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  2. My first thought was the calendar change in 1752. We lost numbered days, but kept the same 7 day week, unmodified.

    It must have been fun with the creative language. I dated a girl with a mother having unusual words. One was "Methodeist", which seemed to be a mix of methodism and deism. Another was a "Sheetcookie" which meant a simple cookie sheet. I had often baked cookies in a broadsheet form, and cut out individual letters and numbers. (And ate the scraps.

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    1. Absolutely fun with the creative approach to language. I know my parents had more Spoonerisms, but I'm not remembering them right now. I do like "Methodeist", though. That's a keeper.

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  3. I love this story! You had cool parents.

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  4. Sounds like your parents lead a colorful life.

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    1. I've always thought that I was very lucky to have the parents I did.

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  5. Love the "interesting turns of phrase" and spoonerisms; you must have had an interesting childhood! Glad you were never knocked into the second Tuesday of next week, as it was meant! ;)

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    1. I did indeed have an interesting childhood. My mother loved languages and playing with them. I think that was in part due to her early exposure to multiple languages in her family.

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