Quite a name huh?
It was this reservoir/murky water/sewage area
enclosure between the big town park and the driving range. I actually didn't
know it was called the sump until I got to high school. The only reason I knew
it was called the sump was because apparently, that's where teenagers would go
to drink and smoke and do god knows what else.
And those stories always involved the sump.
I say god knows what else because I never found out…
because I never went. Just like I never went or did a lot of things in high
school. Not that I was a sheltered kid. In fact I would argue I had a more
robust high school experience than most people. However, my experience
consisted of things that did not happen in a sump.
I was never a part of that kind of crowd. Looking
back you could probably have picked out the "Sump" crowd in 4th or
5th grade.
I might have had some casual acquaintance with
pre-sump people back then, but that was it. I remember hanging out with my
friend Jeff one day when he ran into a couple of his slightly older, slightly
more nefarious friends. Pre-sump types. The types that left at each other's
jokes but seemed to never hear mine. No matter how many times I repeated them.
Well Jet and I and the pre-sumpers were just
walking around one day when we all went in to the local drug store. They all
bought large cans of Arizona Iced Tea. I didn't particularly want one but I
figured this was what cool people did. So I bought one too.
We then walked behind the bank and sat on the curb
of the closed drive through teller drinking our iced teas. Like it was illegal
or something. I distinctly remember stepping outside myself to observe us
sitting against the backdrop of white washed brick and thinking "Is this
what being cool is about? Sitting behind the bank and drinking Iced tea?"
It was merely a foreshadowing for years later when
alcohol and cigarettes would replace ice tea and tires, broken glass (and
possibly sewage) would replace white washed bank walls. Teenagedom was a far
cry from adolescence.
People started referring to the gathering at the
sump as "Sump Parties."
It seemed a strange pairing of words even back
then. Like, Manure Fiesta or Compost Celebration.
But when you are a teenager with no privacy and
nowhere else to go, I suppose a sump is the equivalent of a local Tijuana.
There might have even been a donkey at the sump,
who knows.
I never went to the "sump parties" for
several reasons. The first was, IT WAS AT THE SUMP. The idea of lying to my
parents to hop over a fence into a park, to sneak through another fence, to scramble
down a disgusting trash filled hill in the pitch black of night so I could hang
out around of bunch of people I couldn't see smoking cigarettes just didn't get
my joy meter spinning.
I was far more interested in staying home, watching
Friday night television about idealized versions of high school and cramming
things like waffles, ice cream and as many sugar based toppings as possible
into a bowl in a sundae that probably should have come with a full medical and
dental plan.
The other reason I never went to a sump party was
because, well, I was never invited.
Now I'm sure most of the people who went weren't
"invited." Ninth graders aren't known for sending out hand written
invitations to partake in illegal activities. I'm sure most of the people just
heard from somebody who heard from somebody else. They probably didn't need to
say more than "alcohol, sump, night" to spread the word.
But I had never gone to an event that I wasn't
invited to. We had these "float making parties" in 7th and 8th grade
where a bunch of kids would get together to fold tissue paper flowers to go on
the floats. But those weren't the kinds of parties that everybody wanted to go
to.
Hey guys, who wants to do some manual labor?
But there were girls there, often lots of girls. So
needless to say, I went. There was usually a healthy amount of pretzels and
soda and that was good enough for me.
That wasn't a real party type of party with cool
kids and sketchy goings on. Those were the kinds of parties that like... moms
invited to me to. In fact looking back, I'm almost positive I was invited to
more social gatherings by mothers of my friends than by my actual friends.
And that formalized invitation, which expressed
interest in having me partake in a social function was something significant
for me. I was invited and so I attended.
This inability to understand social gatherings
would follow me into my college years when people down the hall said, "Hey
we're going to a frat party." And my first thought was "were you
invited?" I had never really gone anywhere I wasn't directly invited
before. I always thought that the only people who were supposed to show up were
those directly told of the event.
I've come a long way since then considering when I
plan my own birthday I usually end up telling my friends "Tell anybody who
might like me they should come."
Needless to say I haven't typically had epic turnouts
at my birthday.
But then again, I've never had my
birthday at the sump.
4 comments:
When I saw the word "sumpin" in the email subject I thought, "Oh great, I bet this about the sump and how Rich used to hang out there. Awesome. Can't wait to hear about some high school experience I never had and will never understand!" Instead it was about my exact sump/college/float parties/invite issues/experiences. I feel 3% more normal after each blog entry of yours that I read. At this rate I might feel like a real human by the end of the year.
P.S. Thank you.
The sump sounds like a Stephen King/Stand By Me scene...
When I was a teenager, it was parties in old bunkers at night that were the 'thing' - I couldn't see the attraction in drinking cheap beer in a scary smelly concrete hole with no lighting. As far as everyone else knew, my parents were the strictest in all creation, barely let me out...that was my excuse and it got me out of many 'parties'.
I don't think I had sumps or bunkers in high school. But I guess if there were, I would be the last to know. Looking back, I was so insulated from these things that word-of-mouth wouldn't reach my normal circle of friends, let alone me...and now "post-sump" kids really confuse me.
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