People keep saying that this par­ent­ing gig draws a lot on your own memor­ies of being a teen­ager and it’s true.

Doug’s daugh­ter Tina turned 17 on Thursday, so we all headed out to an amuse­ment park a few hours away and spent a crazy day on go karts and bumper boats fol­lowed by chinese dinner. She scored candles and soaps from her sister, a brace­let and a nape pier­cing from us (she asked for a tattoo, but it’s illegal in this state if you’re under 18, even with a par­ent’s per­mis­sion – thank the gods!) and a key­board with light up keys from her boy­friend and his Mom. Her sister Cassie is stay­ing with us for a week so she could be here for the party.

She’s super-excited that in one year, she’ll be 18. She starts her “senior year” in Septem­ber (Year 12, for the Aus­sies reading).

It makes me think a lot about when I turned 17, just before I went into Year 12. I wish I had my actual diar­ies with me: I’d read the entries for each week for the next year, I think. 

Let’s see if I can exhume it. Janu­ary, 1988. Bicen­ten­nial year in Aus­tralia. I think my par­ents took my sis­ters up to Bris­bane for some exhib­i­tion and I refused to go on polit­ical grounds because I dis­agreed with how the 200 year anniversary of the inva­sion of Aus­tralia was being “cel­eb­rated”. (I did men­tion that I’ve apo­lo­gized to my par­ents about my teen­hood, right?)

As school star­ted, I remem­ber my sis­ters in Year 10 learn­ing their instru­ments (cla­ri­net and trum­pet) and how abso­lutely impossible it was to study with them doing scales and parts to songs I could­n’t recog­nize. Rather than go into the whole year here, I think I’ll try and revisit this peri­od­ic­ally as the year goes on…