child-stories-msg – 10/10/15 Stories of SCA children. NOTE: See also the files: SCA-stories1-msg, you-know-msg, toys-msg, dolls-msg, children-msg, teenagers-msg, babies-msg, child-gam-msg. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ From: jprod at sagepub.COM (Journals Production Department) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: SCA Kids Date: 23 Apr 1993 18:59:21 -0400 Organization: Sage Publications, Inc., Newbury Park, CA When Lady Katherine the White was preparing to move from Tennessee to Texas, her young one asked, "Mommy, where's Texas? She said, "Ansteorra, dear." He knew _exactly_ where that was. Sister Kate -- Journals Production Department, Sage Publications, Inc. 2455 Teller Road, Newbury Park, CA 91320 voice: (805) 499-0721 fax: (805) 499-0871 via Internet: jprod at sagepub.com From: magesteve at aol.com (Mage Steve) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: You know your Children are in the SCA when... Date: 21 Mar 1994 17:25:02 -0500 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) ...your five year old daughter, who is watching a video of the Gene Kelly Musical "Brigadoon" (Scottish Wedding scene), looks up and says in a clear scornful voice, "Bad Pensic Garb!!!!" (She did it last weekend, and you know something, she was right. It is a awful movie and has some awful costumes). Kenwrec FitzRaymund MKA Steve Sheets Barony of Ponte Alto, Kingdom of Atlantia Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: Wynn Subject: Re: You know your Children are in the SCA when... Date: Wed, 23 Mar 1994 19:39:29 GMT ..when you overhear your three-year old meeting new little friends at the playground and he asks, "What's your name?" then "What's your SCA name?" wklosky at nitro.mines.colorado.edu Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: asparrow at nyx.cs.du.edu (Angelia Sparrow) Subject: Re: You know your Children are in the SCA when... Organization: Nyx, Public Access Unix at U. of Denver Math/CS dept. Date: Tue, 29 Mar 94 02:01:02 GMT Your two year old freezes when you say "Hold!" Among her 40 word vocabulary is "King" And she's happier in her tunic and surcoat than in a sweatsuit. (At least she takes off the sweat suit to wear the tunic) Aethelynde mother of Anastasia d'Eath, Calanais-nuadh, Calontir From: jacquetta at aol.com (Jacquetta) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You know your Children are in the SCA when... Date: 29 Mar 1994 15:10:03 -0500 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) If I can add one: ...when your 4th grader writes an essay in school about a time when she "felt special" and writes about the time Daddy carried her favor in a tourney and how great it was when he won his first 2 bouts and how disappointed she was when he got killed in the semi-finals and then the teacher calls you and wants to know if your husband has died... Lady Jacquetta de Mehun, mother of Rhian ferch Malcom - an excellent writer, if not a discreet one... From: magesteve at aol.com (Mage Steve) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: You know your Children are in the SCA when... Date: 22 Apr 1994 16:52:13 -0400 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) ... your 3 1/2 year old daughter keeps yelling "Vivat" every time someone cheers at her Grandfather's & new Step-Grandmother's wedding. Kenwrec FitzRaymund From: ercil at astrid.UUCP (Ercil C. Howard-Wroth) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You know you're in the SCA when... Date: 25 Apr 94 13:50:38 PST Organization: Private No Your daughter will only wear her `real' clothes to school and her `real clothes' are garb not shorts and a t-shirt. Astridhr Selr Leifsdottir E. Howard-Wroth ...uunet!astrid!astridhr Shire of Heatherwyne astrid!astridhr at uunet.UU.NET Kingdom of Caid 70327.1614 at compuserve.com From: teachmrt at aol.com (Teach Mr T) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYINTSCA Date: 19 Nov 1995 21:29:14 -0500 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) Your 8-year-old is at Gramma's writing up "menus" for Thanksgiving Dinner, and when you look at them you see: "First Remove . . . Second Remove . . . Third Remove." On the way home from Gramma's, she announces she has a homework assignment, finding things that "The Littles," 6-inch tall people could use in their home. She wants to make a "weapons chest" and use pins as "their swords" Can't wait until she gets to high school Liam O'Donndubhain Barony Beyond the Mountain Kingdom of the East From: Alan G. <102256.3503 at CompuServe.COM> Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYINTSCA Date: 23 Nov 1995 05:22:25 GMT Organization: CompuServe, Inc. (1-800-689-0736) Or the school calls you up to discuss why your 6 year old is singing about death and destruction during recess (BORN ON THE LISTFIELD) Or they complement your child on their active imagination after your child tells them that they will be spending the weekend with the king Alan G. From: djheydt at uclink.berkeley.edu (Dorothy J Heydt) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYASCAP Date: 14 Mar 1996 16:02:26 GMT Organization: University of California at Berkeley In article <4i3bo2$mp2 at garcia.efn.org>, Amy Carpenter wrote: >>>You know you're an SCA parent when... >>They do medieval history in seventh grade and your child knows >>more about it than the teacher does. --Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin > >"No, that was _third_ grade.".... Well, I can't tell from your userid where you are. In California, the public schools do the Middle Ages in the spring half of the seventh grade. The spring being now upon us, the phones are beginning to jangle off the hook with seventh-grade teachers wanting demos.... Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin Dorothy J. Heydt Mists/Mists/West UC Berkeley Argent, a cross forme'e sable djheydt at uclink.berkeley.edu PRO DEO ET REGE Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYASCAP From: una at bregeuf.stonemarche.org (Honour Horne-Jaruk) Date: Tue, 19 Mar 96 13:20:17 EST nzsm at spis.co.nz (SPIS & NZ Science Monthly) writes: > You know you're an SCA parent when... > > ...you suddenly realise the reason you don't understand what your toddler is > singing is cos he's doing it in Middle English You get a call from your son's school asking for a translation of "poplolly", because he just called his favorite teacher that... -and of "tentergut", because he used that one on the principal > ...your toddler is asked to name friends of the family and he gives two > names for everyone (one for "when they are in garb") ...He's asked for "Person to contact in case of emergency" and he writes "Baroness Arastorm" > ...your toddler is asked what he wants for a present and he asks for a > tabard his therapist asks what the first signs he's growing up would be, and he says "My mother cuts my skirts off and lets me wear a knife" > > Really makes it all seem worthwhile! > > katherine kerr of the far-away southern reaches of Caid ...Even if hard to explain... }:-> Alizaunde/Una (Friend) Honour Horne-Jaruk, R.S.F. From: croaker at access.digex.net (Francis A. Ney, Jr.) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYASCAP Date: 20 Mar 1996 13:18:31 -0500 Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA In article 1tlm7799 at tstc.edu writes: > You know you're an SCA parent when... > > When your daughter is in kindergarden and gets in trouble in show and > tell for lying, ie telling everyone that her mother was a Lady in Waiting > to the Queen. This required my wife to go to the school, in garb, and > straighten it out. This was a while back. My daughter is now 16. > > Uillec Mac Aoidh Wasn't there a royal some time back whose kid got sent home with a note about an 'overactive imagination' when said kid told the class that his father was the king? Resulting in said royal appearing at said school in garb with knights, court and all? --- Frank Ney WV/EMT-B VA/EMT-A N4ZHG LPWV NRA(L) GOA CCRKBA JPFO Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: YKYASCAP From: vern.hall at pcohio.com (Vern Hall) Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 08:48:00 -0500 Organization: PC-OHIO PCBOARD - Cleveland, OH - 216-381-3320 TLM> You know you're an SCA parent when... > > When your daughter is in kindergarden and gets in trouble in > show and tell for lying, ie telling everyone that her mother > was a Lady in Waiting to the Queen. This required my wife to > go to the school, in garb, and straighten it out. This was a > while back. My daughter is now 16. Doesn't just happen in kindergarten... My son, who at the time was eighteen, had a teacher in sr high school english who had a show-and-tell kinda thing the first couple weeks of school... Each student was required to tell something they did over the summer and the rest of the class was supposed to guess whether their tale was true or false... My son's tale was that he stood guard at the East Kingdom Royal Encampment at War... Well, you can guess what the majority of the class (and the teacher) guessed as to the veracity of that statement... He was on the verge of getting himself into a touch of trouble when (for some strange reason and totally out of character) he decided to exercise a bit of restraint and attended class the following day in garb (no weapons)..and..with photos for proof... AElric of Coventree Grove --------------------------------------------------------------- PC-OHIO PCBoard Online pcohio.com HST 16.8: 216-381-3320 The Best BBS in America Cleveland, OH V34+ 33.6: 216-691-3030 --------------------------------------------------------------- From: jocelynp at cts.com (Jocelyn Plazewska) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: Tue, 23 Apr 1996 16:02:08 GMT Organization: CTS Network Services You Know You're a Parent in the SCA When............. your toddler (who is just learning to talk) tells you to "Get sword!! Get sword!!!!" instead of a knife so you can cut a bananna in pieces. Kasia Katarzyna Plazewka Mka Jocelyn Plazewksa Barony of Calafia Kingdom of Caid From: ddfr at best.com (David Friedman) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 23 Apr 1996 17:12:49 GMT Organization: Best Internet Communications Many years ago, we discovered that when visiting Baron William of Weir and his wife and son, the visitor, on entering, would be offered a sword or a shield by the (very young) son. He knew that he was only allowed to hit people who were armed. You accepted at your peril. I've been trying to teach my two year old son the same rule, but with less success than William and Pippa had. David/Cariadoc -- ddfr at best.com From: ksutterf at freenet.columbus.oh.us (Krysta Sutterfield) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 23 Apr 1996 20:58:41 -0400 Organization: The Greater Columbus FreeNet Your son learns to drum before he can walk. Your kids respond to 'HOLD!' instead of 'STOP!' Your child curtsies or bows on meeting the principal. Your kids are the most polite in the school. [most SCA kids I know are years ahead of others in manners, and sometimes common sense, too.] -- ~Krysta From: mhwag at aol.com (MHWag) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 25 Apr 1996 09:35:34 -0400 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) Both I and my squire-sister had to explain to our children's teachers about those gruesome songs our sweet little ones were singing - all about axes and death and listfields. On the other hand, they keep getting high marks for their creative writing assignments, all written about tournaments and quests and wars and kings and queens. "What wonderful imaginations!!!" My kids school has "culture-week" each spring, and my table tends to be very popular. Something to do with the chain mail and pictures of people bashing each other. And then there was the day I was late picking them up from their after-school program due to the fighter practice in my backyard, and picked them up while still in armor. Aileen From: "L. HERR-GELATT" Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 26 Apr 1996 00:29:02 GMT Organization: ProLog - PenTeleData, Inc. In reply to "you know you're a parent in the SCA when....." I took my first daughter away from daddy at age 1 1/2 for two weeks, to visit my sister. When we came back, we met Daddy at a fighter practice part of the way home. Meggie was very strange towards her dad, wouldn't have anything to do with him, in fact, until she saw him in armor, yelled "Daddy" and went running into his arms. Not many Dads (or future beaus) would be able to live up to her mental image of the perfect guy.....full plate and all. I guess a mom could have it worse. And then there was the time I was called into her Montessori (read as pacifist) preschool to explain this fascination with weaponry....and the fact that Daddy killed some guys last weekend! Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: Paula Barreto Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Organization: Indiana University South Bend Date: Fri, 26 Apr 1996 16:57:28 GMT ...Your child insists on taking her dragon to day care instead of a teddy bear. ...Your child says "OH YEA" when they want your undivided attention ...Your child doesn't understand why they can't put on their SCA garb to go to the park ...Your child sits quietly beyond the list rope waiting for an adult to get her toy that has wandered into the empty list field. Ldy Isabel Moonsdaghter -- netscape-newsrc-map-file newsrc-sun2.iusb.edu C:\NETSCAPE\NEWS\NEWSRC FALSE newsrc-sun2.iusb.edu C:\netscape\news\X0O9AQ82.rcg TRUE From: alysk at ix.netcom.com(Elise Fleming ) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 27 Apr 1996 12:38:31 GMT Organization: Netcom You know you are a parent in the SCA when...your son has another asthma attack, and you grab your pouch with lucet and cord so that you have something to do while you wait during his treatment in the emergency room. Makes a really nice ice-breaker with the nurses! "What's that you're doing?", they innocently ask and you take a deep breath to reply... Alys Katharine From: CAT_McGLOTHLIN at smtplink.sagepub.COM (CAT_McGLOTHLIN) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: YKYASCAPW... Date: 29 Apr 1996 16:48:00 -0400 Organization: The Internet You know you're an SCA parent when... ...your kindergarten son has finished his alphabet homework and you ask him if he would like to color or work on his weaving project from the camping event two weeks ago and he jumps up to finish his weaving! ...your 2nd-grade daughter can't stand to work on spelling homework assigned by the teacher but races through a week's-worth of spelling assignments when you've changed the vocabulary list to "Middle Ages, Shire, Caid, Darach, sword, knight, tournament, garb, banner...." ...your 2nd-grade daughter starts to whine when you've assigned her an open essay topic "What's you're favorite part of the SCA?" and she says "Not fair, Mom! I love everything! I can't pick *ANYTHING* to write about!" -- Eilidh Swann of Strathlachlan ** Darach, Caid (Ventura, CA) Christine (Cat) McGlothlin Gurkweitz ** cat_mcglothlin at sagepub.com From: nzsm at spis.co.nz (SPIS & NZ Science Monthly) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYASCAPW... Date: Sun, 05 May 96 23:03:28 GMT Organization: South Pacific Information Services Ltd ...when you kneel at Baronial Court only to find yourself flanked by your 20-month-old on the cushion next to you... katherine kerr ========================================================================== New Zealand Science Monthly -- NZ's only general-interest science magazine nzsm at spis.co.nz * Fax: +64-3-384-5138 * Tel: +64-3-384-5137 P.O. Box 19-760, Christchurch, New Zealand <<< Humour, science, skeptics and SCA at: http://www.spis.co.nz/spis >>> From: widdershins at widdershins.seanet.com (John and Susan Hutchins) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: Sun, 12 May 1996 02:25:00 GMT Organization: Seanet Online Services, Seattle WA You have to re-plaster the ceiling in the living room, because the ceiling fell down when your 5 year old son made a moat in his bedroom to go around his toy castle..... ;-) Branwen From: rowanwolfs at aol.com (ROWANWOLFS) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 27 May 1996 00:54:28 -0400 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) Your son draws samples of celtic knotwork and trades them for extra-neat pencils and pens at school.... Your son is watching _First Knight_ and notes that the knights have no white belts... And complains that the armor would never pass inspection.... You can take the boy out of the middle of the stick jocks but you can't take the stick jock out of the middle of the boy. Rattan fever is incurable. Rowan Date: Mon, 27 May 1996 23:38:52 +0000 From: Aengus&Eibhlin Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: YKYASCAP I was enjoying a quiet morning at a camping event watching my 2 year old beat upon a war shield with a plastic sword, when a *very large* squire enters our encampment to play with him. My son runs into the tent as soon as the squire takes up his fighting guard. The squire laughs and says "I've gotten that reaction before". To which I responded "No, you don't understand...he went to get *you* armor" At which point the toddler comes out of the tent with an extra plastic shield and sword for the squire. :-) From: tmcneer at ix.netcom.com(Joseph McNeer ) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYASCAP Date: 28 May 1996 14:01:27 GMT Organization: Netcom A couple of Pennsics ago, my four year old was playing with boffer swords, rather energetically with a five year old, when the older boy struck him a blow that sent hom sprawling on his back, his sword spinning, just out of reach. As the other mother started to react, my son stretched over, grabbed his sword, bounced to his feet and announced loudly, "LIGHT!" and rejoined the attack. The peer in the next camp, promptly pronounced them "ready for rattan!" From: "Jean-Claude (Doug Grove)" Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 29 May 1996 18:51:59 GMT Organization: The Barony of Iron Mountain .. when your 16-month old son will force you to take the plastic extend-o-sword... and will insist on playing swordfight with you for a solid HOUR! .. when the same 16-month old son cries when you won't let him take your rattan weapon onto the field so he can challenge two dukes, then tries to take the POLEARM! (Yep, it happened just like that!) .. when (once again) the same 16-month old son, upon seeing your brand new helmet, goes and gets a bucket and puts it on... ..AND (continuing the above) when you lower the visor he lowers the handle of the bucket! HONEST!!! From: mercbard at aol.com (MERCBARD) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 7 Jun 1996 21:21:51 -0400 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) upon feeding your child your first instruction is "put down the weapon then get your food" From: corun at access4.digex.net (Corun MacAnndra) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You Know You Are a Parent in the SCA When........ Date: 8 Jun 1996 11:19:09 -0400 Organization: Express Access Online Communications, Greenbelt, MD USA I'm not a parent, SCA or otherwise, however I just have to relate this incident. At the recent University Atlantiae, I happened to be chatting with some friends in the Registrar's Office (alright, the big classroom we'd set up for registration). Many of those in the room are Oldcastles, including his Grace, Duke Gyrth Oldcastle. Suddenly, the 20 month old son of Tadgh and Meraud, picked up a plastic baseball bat with his right hand. Facing Mommy, he sticks his left hand straight out in front of him while turning the left side of his body towards her and proceeds to stick his elbow in his ear. Yes, the classic Oldcastle fighting stance. Everyone was incapacitated with laughter, and His Grace just stared dumbfounded. His Grace then commented that he knew who the father was. Of course Trey was delighted at all the attention, and kept up his practice, swinging his plastic bat. At one point His Grace told Trey to bend his knees. The child held for a moment, looking at Gyrth and promply bent his knees accordingly. He then turned his attention back to his opponent and took another swing at Mommy. Another round of laughter ensued, leaving us once again helpless with mirth. In service, Corun (watching the next generation of Oldcastles grow up) =============================================================================== Corun MacAnndra | Can not run out of time. There is infinite time. You Dark Horde by birth | are finite. Zathras is finite. This....is wrong tool. Moritu by choice | -- Zathras From: powers at brain.cis.ohio-state.edu (william thomas powers) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCAW Date: 9 Sep 1996 21:38:57 -0400 Organization: The Ohio State University, Department of Computer and Information Science YKYITSCAW---you get your children to help look through a bunch of pennies for "wheat backs" and when they ask what that is you tell them that it looks like a laurel wreath----and they have no trouble recoginizing them. Thomas From: at LakeheadU.ca at bolt.lcs.mit.EDU (Lakehead User) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: You know you're in the SCA when Date: 17 Sep 1996 15:48:28 -0400 Organization: Lakehead University You know you're in the SCA when the bedtime conversation with your 9 year old daughter centers around forms of address for royalty when they are a duke, knight and prince at the same time! Christiana (Mare Amethystinum) From: David Johnson Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: You know you're in the SCA when Date: 17 Sep 1996 22:51:53 GMT My 5 year old keeps practicing her curtsey and is teaching her mundane friends to do so! We have had to answer odd questions and it really is a whole new realm of parenting when you have to correct your child's manners by reminding her to say "Baroness" Elspeth not just Elspeth. From: widdershins at widdershins.seanet.com (John and Susan Hutchins) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCATLW Date: Sat, 19 Oct 1996 20:24:27 GMT Organization: Seanet Online Services, Seattle WA Someone asks your son "Do you know what you get when you're 16? (meaning a driver's license, of course) And he replys disdainfully "You can't fight at 16 anymore, I've got to be 18!" Branuenn Goch From: djheydt at uclink.berkeley.edu (Dorothy J Heydt) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCAW... Date: 24 Jun 1997 00:24:46 GMT Organization: University of California at Berkeley A while back, somebody said, >You go to talk to your daughter's counselor, and she says the entire >family is in denial, and has trouble dealing with reality, .prefering >to deal in fantasy.. I remember the time my son told his high-school counselor he was in the SCA and so were his parents, and she got very sympathetic, "Oh, you poor kid, having your parents hitting each other all the time must be terrible for you." Tris explained that neither of us fought, and she said "But that's what they do. I've seen them at the BART station. They hit each other with sticks." It was after that that we put together a photo album of all the OTHER things we do and started taking it to the Thursday night BART practice. Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin Dorothy J. Heydt Mists/Mists/West Albany, California PRO DEO ET REGE djheydt at uclink Newsgroups: rec.org.sca From: "Maggie MacD." Subject: YKYITSAW Date: Mon, 30 Jun 1997 08:34:38 GMT Passing a KOA campground, your six year old points at it and cries out: "LOOK MOMMY!!! A WAR!!!" From: jen-guy at home.com (Jennifer Guy) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: YKYITSCAW Date: Wed, 23 Sep 1998 14:51:25 GMT ....Your 5 year old is playing with the Fisher-Price castle set and tells his cousin to get the Hot Wheels out of the way, cause they're not period! Date: Sun, 19 Oct 1997 08:30:03 -0500 To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG From: dentim at myriad.net (Tim Lozos) Subject: Re: ANST - More baby news The SCA is definitely an interesting place to raise kids! For instance, when I picked up my 4 year old daughter from kindergarten the other day, her teacher said, "Where IS Ansteorra? Alexis keeps telling me she lives there!" Or when we were watching a football game on tv with some friends, and my two year old son Nikolas saw that everyone was getting excited about a play, he started yelling "Vivat!" and clapping wildly! Lady Allysyn Kranidious Ravensfort......ANSTEORRA! From: joelight at lx.net (joelight) To: "ansteorra" Subject: ANST - Kids Date: Mon, 20 Oct 1997 21:56:47 -0500 Just for grins...who else has stories about our SCA kids? I have a favorite. When Master Cadwallader's daughter was in about the third grade, they were walking in a line down the hall. Several teachers were standing and discussing their units on the Middle Ages and one mentioned the word "Saxon." Tonya immediately said, "Saxons? PPPHHTTTOOEY!" Then she spits in the floor and keeps right on walking. I was there to pick up my son...it was great seeing Lady Rowena try to explain that one! Date: Tue, 21 Oct 1997 01:11:03 -0400 From: Aine of Wyvernwood To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG Subject: Re: ANST - Kids well, my darling dtr, who is 1/4 japanese of sumarai blood, sat thru braveheart's bloodiest scenes yelling for them to lop off more heads.....I just slid a little further down in my seat trying to pretend I did not know her. Her brother in Social Studies class studying the Norman Conquest, raised his hand to correct the teacher when she refered to William the Conqueror he corrected her and said he was known as Duke William to some and William the Bastard to others....I had to collect him at the office. Then there was the time he was given the task to write a paper on ''gods and goddess' '' none were specifically given, so he wrote about the Goddess Danu and the Tuatha de Danaan. His teacher went ballistic, had a fit, 'why this are pagan goddess. ''Well yes, they are, btw, do _you_ know what pagan means?'' the teacher had apparently wanted something on either greek or roman gods/goddess'. My son calmly explained that he was neither Greek nor Italian but Saxon, Welsh and German. At that point the teacher was confused and upset, she then told him ''that, that, that, they are so uncivilized."' My 12 yr old replied, ''define civilized please."" I again had to go collect him in the office. I had to explain both times that we belonged to a medieval reenactment group.....sigh.... [submitted by rmhowe ] Subject: The World According to SCA Children Date: Wed, 6 Jan 1999 23:27:28 EST From: Alesia4 at aol.com To: atlantia at atlantia.sca.org I thought some might enjoy this little tale. As I prepared dinner tonight my four year old daughter asked "If we could have soup next time." I answered yes, and suggested chicken, her favorite. "Mommy," she asked, "you have to kill chickens to make soup?" "Yes, they do." I answered, as I waited for an emotional response from my tenderhearted little girl. After a brief pause she looked up and said, "In the morning, Daddy can go to a farm. He can take his shinny armor and a sword and kill us some chickens!" "Daddy" is still trying to figure out how to handle this one. After I suggested the grocery store so "Daddy's armor wouldn't get dirty." She quickly answered, "We'll just clean it." Keeping a sense of humor. Alesia de Trenwyth [Submitted by "Philippa Alderton" ] From: Krysta Sutterfield To: sca-middle at dnaco.net Date: Friday, December 11, 1998 7:35 PM Subject: [Mid] YKYITSCAW... (kid) I have no clue where I read/heard this..but i thought you guys might enjoy it just the same..it's cute. As per custom of these current middle ages, a young girl had been taken to see Santa at the local mall. Now, mind you, she was only about 3 or 4, and had been SCA born, bred, and raised. Here is the dialogue that followed between the little girl and the unfortunate Santa... SANTA: "Well, little girl, what would you like for Christmas?" GIRL:(in the enthused kiddy voice) "I would like a Sword and some Armour!" SANTA:(looking around, a bit surprised, not quite sure he had heard correctly)"A Sword and Armour? What would a good girl like you do with a sword and Armour??" GIRL:(beaming at the poor man)"I want it so I can practice hard and be Queen like Mommy one day!!" Needless to say, the Santa was not a little confused... and the parents of the young girl were considerably amused at the whole situation... Heather Subject: RE: ANST - GW Date Discussion Date: Tue, 16 Mar 99 19:09:05 MST From: "Kathryn Norris" To: Jackie wrote: > You know...it seems as if there is a real concern for those of us who are > educators. There are many of us in the education field who play and we only > seem to get to attend once every couple of years for this reason. What was > the original reason for changing the event from June to March...other than > heat. Is the site booked through the summer for other events? Just > wondering. > > Ulrica We have a funny about the date. Our daughter is in high school now and is old enough to know if she is sick enough to stay home from school or not. Since she knows that she will be out of school 3-4 days for Gulf Wars, she is sure to go to school in order to save her "sick" days for War! Caitlin bean Ghearailt Date: Thu, 18 Nov 1999 14:05:39 MST "Dennis Grace" Subject: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG Salut Cozyns, Lyonel aisai. I'm forwarding this (unedited) from the Iron Rose list. I though Stefan might want a copy for his Florilegium >>>>>>>> From: "Guilford" To: Subject: Re: [IR] Young Liar Date: Tue, 16 Nov 1999 19:41:12 -0500 I was on the edge of this, just arriving in society when it was happening. I did not participate in it, but did witness the preperation and after efffects. Okay List, here goes... About 15 years ago a young girl, the oldest of four, arrived in school just after Pennsic. The teachers "get to know each other" topic was... What do your parents do? The question was posed to each of the young students (if I remeber right, this was first grade), one by one while sitting in a circle. When it came to Diana, her response was " My daddy is King." The teacher, thinking she had a student with an imagination thought she would get the upper hand with... "and I suppose your mommy is a Queen." Of course, Diana was thrilled to see that her teacher knew, so she smiled, sat back and relaxed. Then her teacher went in for the kill. She asked Diana what her mommy and daddy really did since they were not King and Queen. Diana insisted that they were, teacher removed her from the class, and told the principal they had a problem. "The child insists that her parents are the King and Queen of the East Kingdom, she has no concept of reality." So, the school psycologist was consulted. Then the parents were called. It went something like this..... Taylor household. Oh Good. Mrs Taylor, this is your daughters school. No Diana isn't hurt, but we would like you and your husband to come in for a meeting. It seems that Diana has problems dealing with reality. She believes you and your husband are King and Queen of an imaginary kingdom. At this point, Arastorm lost it. She explained to the nice people that her daughter was telling the truth. The school didn't want to listen. So she set up a meeting, for the next morning. Then started making phone calls. First her husband, Earl Sir Alfwine, his squires, her retainers and other house members. She contacted a herald and made arrangements for The Meeting. The next meeting, promptly on time, the King and Queen of the East, their daughter, and the entire entourage (20 +/- in all) arrived at the school in full court garb with a herald announcing their arrival. First they held a small curia type meeting in the principals office. They got the school to "get a grip with reality" then insisted on helping their daughter save face after the ordeal she was put through the day before. Thus the entire elementary school sat in the gym as a Court was held. Fighters donned armor, songs were taught and pictures were shared. Diana and her siblings as they followed, were never accused of not having a grip with reality again. The End Cinder From - Thu Nov 18 17:11:01 1999 Date: Thu, 18 Nov 1999 14:55:51 MST From: "Padraig Ruad O'Maolagain" Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] 'wolf wrote: >fun story .. this iteration placed it 15 years back ... heard first variant of >it 25 years back when i was in Steppes and origionating somewhere out Aten Way >... surfaced again in slight variations about every 5 years (i remember the >next iteration was supposidly Merides ... and remember one placed in the West) >.. some urban legends are eternal, such is the nature of "the tale" > >'wolf Though possibly with some basis in fact. To wit: Baroness Dana Mac an Ghabhann's grandson, Daniel, was talking in school about his grandma's friend, Lady Bice' di Pietro. Well, the proper pronunciation of "Bice'" is "bitchy", which is, the lady herself acknowledges with an evil grin, part of the reason she chose the name. There is no way an 8-year-old can make this sound plausible to a teacher, so Daniel ended up in the Principal's office for referring to grandma's friend "bitchy", and it required a visit to the school by Daniel's mother and grandmother to convince them that: 1) No, Daniel was NOT being disrespectful and smartmouthed, and 2) The name of the lady in question really is "bitchy", her SCA name being the only name that Daniel knows her by. I'm sure this required a more lengthy and elaborate explanation than I will speculate on here. Truth is not only stranger than fiction, but often much more amusing. Padraig Date: Thu, 18 Nov 1999 15:47:34 MST From: Scot and Domino Eddy Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG OK, folks here's a true one for all of you... One of our bridesmaid brought her children to our wedding this past spring, which was an SCA wedding. Apparently this so impressed young Jessica (4th grade) that when asked to write about "Her most happy moment" she chose to write about the time when she went to a wedding of the "king and queen where everyone dressed like the olden days" (we wore wedding crowns and nearly everyone was in medieval clothing). Since this was for the TAAS practice test she got a 0 for not writing about something true. Mom wasn't happy. This has much simpler ending. Mom called the school, explained what occured, showed some pictures, and the school apologized. Date: Thu, 18 Nov 1999 22:11:53 MST From: "Pookie" Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: > I'm sure this required a more lengthy and elaborate explanation than I will > speculate on here. > Truth is not only stranger than fiction, but often much more amusing. > > Padraig Children often make stories more intresting in their own little way. A perfect example of this is when Connal and I got married at Elfsea Spring Faire 1996. Our childrens "version" of how the wedding went is: "Mom and Rob stood before a man wearing a dress. Then they got tied up and everyone giggled. Then a lady in her pajamas danced." This is pretty accurate from a 1st grader and kindergarten point of view. Yes we did stand in front of a "man in a dress" as Lord Padraig was in his alternate monk persona and was wearing a traditional monks robe. The being "tied up" was the hand fasting and the giggling came when we were laughing about something said during the ceremony. The lady who was dancing in "her pajamas" was a middle eastern dancer who performed at the reception. So their version isn't far off the mark, but I do have to admit it IS alot more amusing! :) MagD'Leigha Date: Fri, 19 Nov 1999 10:02:10 MST From: "Trish McCurdy" Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG 'wolf wrote: >fun story .. this iteration placed it 15 years back ... heard first variant of >it 25 years back when i was in Steppes and origionating somewhere out Aten Way >... surfaced again in slight variations about every 5 years (i remember the >next iteration was supposidly Merides ... and remember one placed in the West) >.. some urban legends are eternal, such is the nature of "the tale" > >'wolf Hey, That really happened to my family! I was Queen of Atenveldt and my son was in Kindergarten! The school refused a formal demo, so I came in garb and brought picture albums of events, and some of my court came in garb, along with two members of my guard who let the children hit them with swords. It was probably the teacher's most memorible show and tell to date *L* Larissa Date: Fri, 19 Nov 1999 10:24:41 MST From: Michael Tucker Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: ansteorra at Ansteorra.ORG Trish McCurdy wrote: > That really happened to my family! I was Queen of Atenveldt and my son was > in Kindergarten! > > [snip] > > Larissa This type of thing seems to be very common in the SCA. When Patrick Michael Gordonne and Julia de Montoya were King and Queen of Ansteorra (their third reign, I think), one of their young sons got in trouble at school for "lying". Same song, different verse: his teachers asked him what his mommy and daddy did, and he told them they were the King and Queen, and his daddy was a Knight. Well, of course that _couldn't_ be true, so straight to the principal's office they went. A couple of "parent-teacher conferences" cleared everything up, but I bet this has happened to a lot of crowns with young children. It's funny in a way, but it's also sad that teachers are so used to hearing fabrications that they assume an improbable story is false until proven otherwise. Yours, Michael Silverhands Date: Fri, 19 Nov 1999 21:40:06 MST From: "Beth Zimmerman" Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: Michael Tucker wrote: : It's funny in a way, but it's also sad that teachers are so used to hearing : fabrications that they assume an improbable story is false until proven : otherwise. Same thing happened many moons ago when Sir Finn Kelly took the crown. His son went to school and told everyone his daddy was the king of Oklahoma and Texas. Teacher sent him to the principals office where he still wouldn't recant the fib. The principal called Sir Finn to discuss his son's lying. Sir Finn roared that he was the King of Oklahoma and Texas, and explained the SCA to him and brought a demo to the school. Both teacher and principal apologized to his son. Afrena O' Dulaing Who wasn't there, but loves the story. Date: Fri, 19 Nov 1999 21:59:17 MST From: "Kimberly" Subject: Re: ANST - Fwd: [Re: [IR] Young Liar] To: Michael Tucker wrote: : It's funny in a way, but it's also sad that teachers are so used to hearing : fabrications that they assume an improbable story is false until proven : otherwise. This is so true... As many of you know I grew up in the SCA, as so many of our young ones do... I was in 7th or 8 grade when Rowan won crown in her own right. Well we had an assignment to write about, and since Rowan was one of many people that took great care in "raising me" I chose her as my story.. Well low and behold I got an F on the assignment because it was suppose to be a true story... Now my school knew about the SCA; we had done many demos there many a time.... but they just didn't believe that a lady could when crown in her own right... I actually ended up bringing a black star in to prove my point and get my grade reversed!!!!... Lady Kyrstyn of Greenwood, kimi Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2000 00:09:38 -0400 From: Philip & Susan Troy Subject: Re: SC - How Lord Ras bought my husband & me closer!!! From: "Siegfried Heydrich" > So, does he read recipes to the kiddies when he puts 'em to bed? 'OK, > children, do you want to hear the one about Parisian Possets? or the Linzer > Lebenstorten?'. > > Sieggy You _think_ you're joking, don't you??? Recently I asked my kid if he'd brushed his teeth, and he said yes, he had, walked over to me, opened his mouth and said, "Primary source documentation!" Adamantius Date: Wed, 09 Aug 2000 10:59:19 -0400 From: Philip & Susan Troy Subject: Re: SC - Jelly Bean and other flavours It's that parental selective hearing. This is part of why my son was able to get away with loudly asking (until it was much, much too late), at an event at which gingerbrede was served, "Hey, everybody, have you tried [So-and-so's] balls? They're big and spicy and brown!" Within seconds the hall was full of bad Isaac Hayes impersonations... Adamantius, who swears the wording was a coincidence Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 08:43:19 -0600 From: Kat Dyer Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCA Hawke wrote: > ...you explain the SCA sticker on the back of your car to your mother > as both a good conversation starter and a way to get help on the side > of the road ( heard the story of someone stuck on the side of the > road, and fellow Scadians stopped by because of the sticker ) (shields are good for that too... and for carrying things into the house out of the car... polearms are also good for having fellow Scadians stop to help & banners as well) ...your children sing out "tire armor!" when they see dead semi tires on the road ...your children sing out "pell parts!" when they see dead tires on the side of the road (same with downed telephone poles) and demand you stop to pick them up! ... your children wonder why *everyone* doesn't know how to properly curtsy & bow when trying out for the school play or at the Ren Faire, even the two year old ...you keep a tool kit, a sewing kit & a leather repair kit in your car... and know how to *use* them, regardless of your gender! ...while eating out, your children ask when the next remove is coming ...your children know more about medieval history than their teacher, and can point to the relevant source books when correcting them From: mikea at mikea.ath.cx (Mike Andrews) Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCA Date: Wed, 21 Jan 2004 14:57:05 +0000 (UTC) Kat Dyer wrote: > ...your children know more about medieval history than their teacher, > and can point to the relevant source books when correcting them The Boy was being interviewed by the principal of the college-prep charter school he now attends, and somehow the conversation turned to siege weapons. The principal refers to one engine as a catapult, and The Boy says, "Oh, no, Sir; that's a _trebuchet_! _This_ is a catapult, here", and explains the differences. Instant acceptance, even though they had a waiting list of something like 300 kids. -- Mike Andrews / Michael Fenwick Barony of Namron, Ansteorra mikea at mikea.ath.cx Tired old music Laurel Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2004 11:51:27 -0500 From: Kat Dyer Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCAW Abrigon Gusiq wrote: > Alternate, you see a trailer and can recognize the heraldry and know it > is a fellow Scadian. A vehicle goes by and you hear your children cry out in glee "Mommy! Mommy! They've got an SCA sticker! They've got an SCA sticker!" Mine are 8 & 11 and they *still* do it! The truly scary thing is that my head will whip around with me going "Where? Where?" wondering if it's anyone I know! Kat From: "Muirgheal ui Ogain" Newsgroups: rec.org.sca Subject: Re: YKYITSCAW Date: Thu, 27 May 2004 15:18:40 -0400 > I have the feeling my son will be like that! He's already picky > about his garb. What do you want for Christmas, son? "A new belt! And > not a plain one... I want a fancy one!" It seems he wants one with > plaques on it. He didn't get it this year... he was only 7 after all... > but maybe next year since he'll be 8. > > Kat I hear ya, My son will be 7 this year and LOVES to go fabric shopping with me to pick his garb. Of course he only likes expensive fabrics and moans and groans when I make him wear light weight tunics in the 95 degree 100% humidity summers:) Muirgheal Mommy of a Future Atlantian Thug AND Garb Nazi From: Birgitte Andersdotthar Date: June 20, 2009 6:45:22 AM CDT To: trimaris-temp at yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [tri-temp] You know you're a Scadian when... *Or...when your 1st graders teacher calls you up* [creative clipping applied 
to the rest of this]

 ~coughs~ Or your son's VPK teacher corners you when you pick him up, and 
wants to know why he was teaching everyone sword fighting, yelling "HOLD!"
 at kids who were misbehaving, and announcing that one day he was going to be 
king, and there are TOO kings in Florida!

 Fortunately, his teacher's well aware to the oddities of our household, and
 was mostly amused. I didn't make any friends with the other parents from 
that, though....

 Birgitte Andersdotthar
mka Stephanie From: Elaine Manyoki Date: June 20, 2009 1:46:17 PM CDT To: trimaris-temp at yahoogroups.com Subject: Re: [tri-temp] You know you're a Scadian when... Sounds like Brittany/Ariel...we were watching the Princess Bride" with friends, and she loudly announced that the two fighters weren't "real fencers", because they were hopping instead of lunging. ..and then proceeded to demonstrate for our very NON-scadian friends ...it's funny ...I never saw them again!
 Katya From: Hywela Date: February 22, 2011 8:14:43 PM CST To: Stefan li Rous Subject: Coelred and The Moose Song Unlike a lot of SCA'ers, my parents had no problem with my ex-husband and me playing in the SCA. They even came to a few events during our first reign. I was always very proud of how the Kingdom treated them -- almost as a King Dad and Queen Mum. Gabriel and I were young parents, and didn't have a lot of money. Therefore, our kids (my son from a previous marriage, and our younger son) went where we went. Which means if we went to a post-revel, so did they. Coelred, the youngest, was at his first event at the age of 3 weeks: He literally grew up in the SCA. Like his older brother, he was very precocious. Plus, we had some fighters in the Kingdom who thought our kids were awesome, and would even help us keep an eye on our youngsters. Of course, the downside of this was learning lots of things from the fighters, like "The Moose Song". One day, my mom decided to have the kids over to spend time with her. At one point, I guess my youngest decided to impress Grandma with one of his many talents: Singing. He sang her every lyric and the chorus of The Moose Song. (Incidentally, he's still a fine singer: He fronts a hard rock band called "Shedu". They have a bit of a following in Seattle, where they live. His older brother, known in the SCA as Gruffyd, is the lead guitarist.) When I went to pick up the kids, a couple of mom's friends were at her house. Without warning and in front of those ladies, my mother proceeded to scold me up one side and down the other about Coelred singing her that song and how inappropriate it was. She also tossed in a few comments about my unfitness as a mother -- how could I let him hear such a song? Wasn't I concerned at all about what he would turn into? and all that. Her friends glared at me sternly the whole time. I didn't say anything, I just got the kids' stuff together and left. Two days later, she called me about another issue entirely, and I plucked up my courage: "Hey Mom?" "Yes?" "I understand you being upset about Coelred knowing The Moose Song, but did you forget that you taught my brother and me the alternate lyrics of Reveille*?" silence After a long pause: "Sis?" "Yeah Mom?" "You ever tell anyone I taught you that, I'll kill you." "Okay, Mom" "Love you!" "Love you, too, Mom." click. True story. Hywela * the alternate lyrics to Reveille go as follows: There's a monkey in the grass, With a bugle up his ass. Pull it out!  Pull it out! Like a good boy scout! From: Bree Flowers Date: December 11, 2011 12:40:07 PM CST To: Barony of Bryn Gwlad Subject: [Bryn-gwlad] The day after Yule My toddler is still in her dress and refuses to take it off. And apparently the dancers made quite the impact as she has arranged all her Lego people in a circle and is making them step in and back out and swap positions, and bow to each other and clap and hold hands. I think in a few years you'll have another dancer to add to your number. ~Eve From the FB "SCA" group: Taija Paju 11/17/13 I just want to share it with you, since there was the discussion of SCA being a lifestyle, not a hobby. Me and my soon-to-be 5-year old daughter Lotta talked about hobbies. She asked me what hobbies I'd want. I said that music and medieval stuff were enough for me at the moment. She started laughing "Mum, doing medieval stuff isn't a hobby!". I asked her what it was then. "Well, it's just normal". Hm, is she an SCA child? :-) Franchesca Bush 4:16pm Nov 17 My four year old recently found a small shield at the thrift store and said, Mom, that's for defense. We promptly bought it for her. Then she wanted to paint it. Heidi Wright 12/12/13 Having been at Pennsic during the Great Black-out on the East coast some years ago, Daughter's response to the first-day-of-school assignment of "what did you do during the black-out?" was "What black-out?" From the FB "SCA Runway" group: Joan Alfers December 23 at 5:42pm Ahh! Much to my horror this morning when I got up, I was greeted by a mischievous daughter's grin and thousands of pearls all over my carpet. My Heather said "Look! Snow!" All the time that I had taken to meticulously remove the beads from the wedding dress and sorted by sizes were now scattered all over my carpet, like a blanket of snow. I was going to bead my black velvet sleeves for Twelfth Night...but now... I won't have the time to sort them out again. From: "Anwyn Davies" Subject: Re: [Lochac] Mouse Guard? Date: September 25, 2014 at 8:53:03 PM CDT To: "'The Shambles: the SCA Lochac mailing list'" and once a mouse guard always a mouse guard so you have Jonathan of lochswan (http://lochac.sca.org/canon/person.php?id=1353) who is now 27ish attending the queen during court with kids from 7 - 13 I have very fond memories of the Heraldic Melee at Rowany Festival one year when Jonathon of LochSwan was fighting on the Politarchopolis side, and Sir Gregory of LochSwan was fighting with Descarte. When Polit and Descarte were called to the field, Sir Gregory let out this huge bellow at the start, and launched into a mighty tirade about upstart children failing to honour their parents, and promised Jonathon that he would be taught a lesson and well and truly shown just who was the Head of their household. The crowd loved it, and all the other fighters stood back from the melee to watch father and son meet. Sir Greg was taking his time, showing off a little to the crowd and waiting for the perfect moment to make the perfect kill, when Jonathon saw his opening and attacked. One blow, the perfect kill shot. There was that moment of shocked silence, then the crowd went wild. I can hear Sir Gregory's voice in my memory perfectly as he came off the field, first slightly puzzled, then so unbelievably proud: "He killed me...my boy KILLED me!” We joked afterwards that technically this made Jonathon the head of LochSwan, but Sir Gregory had the perfect, unfazed response – if he wants the House, he has to take the mortgage too. It was a wonderful moment; I was privileged to witness the moment a man I adore and respect as a paragon of chivalry, saw his son as a man, not his child, completely for the first time. And not just a man, but a man who has embraced everything his father values and loves, a man to be proud of. I’ve watched a lot of children being brought into the Mouse Guard, I’ve been privileged to recommend some and seen my recommendation acted on, and so many times, it’s been like watching the first chapter of a story like this, children embracing not just the game their parents’ play, but also the values and the ideas of nobility, community and honour. Blod y Tearyhappy From the FB "SCA Garb" group: Andee Lakey 4:31am Jul 12 YKYITSCAW your child's teacher calls because she was the student of the day and could teach any song she wanted, she chose "Ol Dunn Cow" she was 6 at the time. Edited by Mark S. Harris child-stories-msg Page 26 of 26