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Sheep as a lamb

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    Sheep as a lamb

    Sheep as a lamb, Sheep as a lamb

    When I was a lad we didn’t have alcohol in our house. My dad was not a big drinker, the most he ever touched was about three pints on a Sunday afternoon, when he met up with his brothers at my nans house. My mum was teetotal and so it wasn’t like the continent where kids have a glass of something with the meal, it was just absent.

    It was the same at my nans, so whenever there was a family ‘do’, dad and the uncles would get ‘jars out’ from the pub, which happened to be the ‘cuckoo’ in Bootle.
    Jars out would consist of jugs of draught ,crates of double diamond and a few dozen bottles of stout.

    And so it was on the occasion of my cousins christening that I had my first taste of the evil alcohol. The whole family was there, uncles, aunties, cousins, brothers, wives, second cousins – there must have been a hundred people in that house and garden, and me and my cousin John, aged about ten, were sneaking along behind the chairs hunting for half bottles of double diamond.

    I wasn’t even looking for a half bottle. Any old dreg was good enough, provided it didn’t have a ciggy end in it, and it tasted fantasic. I still remember the taste today. They never made beer so tasty ever since than those few swigs of double diamond.

    Of course, the adults knew what we were up to and they made a game of it, loudly proclaiming that the cat had been at their ale, which led to a lot of meowing and scratching of the chair legs. Then nan decided enough was enough and came in , chased us out and promised us ‘the flat or the round’ if we ventured back indoors.




    A few years passed by, and I was in senior school, in a ‘gang’ and we used to spend our long dinner breaks (90 minutes in those days) looking for adventures or some excitement at least.
    We used to bunk out of school dinners and spend our two bob in the chippy or the kiosk, and one of the lads, phil, was always bumming money for ‘loosies’,(single cigarettes).
    One day we were up in Ford, near the canal and we decided to pop into the Liverpool arms, because they had a little off licence that sold crisps and pop and loosies. We waited for a few minutes then banged on the counter but nobody came. We shouted SHOP and looked through the door into the bar…nothing. Then phil leaned over the counter and took a loosie. He jumped back down and stood there , all inoccent. We were all expecting someone to burst in and arrest us for nicking a ciggy, but no one appeared. Phil looked around, then he said, ‘Sheep as a lamb’ and got over the counter, put the loosie back and took a packet of ten woodbines. Steve, the gang leader said Sheep as a lamb and piled over the counter and grabbed a few bottles of ale. I got four bottles of cherry B and stuck them up the sleeves of my blazer. Phil said 'Sheep as a lamb' again and put the ten back and took a packet of twenty.

    Finding somewhere to swig the evidence was tricky. The canal bank was too public, under the bridge stank of wee, so we ended up back at my place in the back garden.
    We never made it back to school that afternoon and one of the lads who was lounging on top of the shed shouted ‘here’s yer mum’ so we scattered up the street, through the flats and did a runner in the opposite direction.

    Later on, at tea time, my mum was fuming. She had a bin full of empties and she said if she ever got her hands on the swines who had thrown their empties into our garden she would leather them.
    I kept my gob shut and beat a hasty



    (\__/)
    (>'.'<)
    ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

    #2
    Well isnt this just lovely and normal.

    Comment


      #3
      The return of friday stories! yeeeaaahhhhh! wwwooohhhooo!

      Comment


        #4

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
          Sheep as a lamb, Sheep as a lamb

          When I was a lad we didn’t have alcohol in our house. My dad was not a big drinker, the most he ever touched was about three pints on a Sunday afternoon, when he met up with his brothers at my nans house. My mum was teetotal and so it wasn’t like the continent where kids have a glass of something with the meal, it was just absent.

          It was the same at my nans, so whenever there was a family ‘do’, dad and the uncles would get ‘jars out’ from the pub, which happened to be the ‘cuckoo’ in Bootle.
          Jars out would consist of jugs of draught ,crates of double diamond and a few dozen bottles of stout.

          And so it was on the occasion of my cousins christening that I had my first taste of the evil alcohol. The whole family was there, uncles, aunties,....


          but KUATB;

          http://forums.contractoruk.com/gener...ml#post1081386
          And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

          Comment


            #6
            So the OP is admitting to theft, underage smoking, underage drinking and playing truant. What a role model.
            What happens in General, stays in General.
            You know what they say about assumptions!

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by MarillionFan View Post
              So the OP is admitting to theft, underage smoking, underage drinking and playing truant. What a role model.
              I realised my parents didn't really care what I got up to when my mum said 'don't do anything I wouldn't do'.
              And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Mich the Tester View Post
                I realised my parents didn't really care what I got up to when my mum said 'don't do anything I wouldn't do'.
                So you have slept with men for money. I bloody knew it.
                What happens in General, stays in General.
                You know what they say about assumptions!

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by escapeUK View Post
                  Well isnt this just lovely and normal.
                  I know you are dying to ask me, 'what is the flat or the round ?'

                  well I went through the first ten years of my life in dread of the flat or the round, without ever knowing what it even was.

                  Then I realised it was the slipper
                  you got the choice of the sole, which made a loud crack and stung, or the heel which had a dull thud and hurt

                  luckily my nan was all bark and no bite, so I never got to choose


                  (\__/)
                  (>'.'<)
                  ("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by EternalOptimist View Post
                    I know you are dying to ask me, 'what is the flat or the round ?'

                    well I went through the first ten years of my life in dread of the flat or the round, without ever knowing what it even was.

                    Then I realised it was the slipper
                    you got the choice of the sole, which made a loud crack and stung, or the heel which had a dull thud and hurt

                    luckily my nan was all bark and no bite, so I never got to choose


                    I've had that. The flat's better. Especially if it was from Miss Williams who taught English
                    And what exactly is wrong with an "ad hominem" argument? Dodgy Agent, 16-5-2014

                    Comment

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