The Wiser Hatter
I'll Lock Up
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- Louisville, Ky
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Lordie, Lordie, how I wanted to go to Disneyland when I was seven years old! It was always the star of the Disneyland TV show, and featured heavily in the Mickey Mouse Club most of the time.
But my family lived in Pennsylvania, and money was not that easily come by for us. I never did get to Disneyland. And with all its changes in the years between 1955 and now, it isn't the place I dreamed about so long ago. Maybe the fantasies of a seven-year-old are the best place for it after all.
I never got to go either, but I think you are right. The picture I had in my mind of the Magic Kingdom 40 years ago watching Wonderful World of Disney on Sunday nights is probably where it needs to stay.Maybe the fantasies of a seven-year-old are the best place for it after all.
I almost feel the same way about Disneyworld. My mom is originally from Florida, so that's where we went for family vacations and a trip to Disneyworld was always a part of it. But so many things have changed, the Disney I long to return to, from the early 1980's, doesn't exist anymore. It's been 13 years since my last visit there and while I harbor hope that I'll get the chance to visit it again at least once more in the future, I know it will be bittersweet because of all the changes.
I lived there from 84-92. Epcot opened in 1982. I was two.I grew up a few hours from Disney World, and went there a few times as a kid (back when you had to buy tickets to exchange for rides and exhibits), but that was not long after it opened. I went once as an adult, right after Epcot was built (which would have been mid-80's?), but I have not been back since. I have no idea what it's like there now, but I'm guessing just more of the same. I'll say this for Disney World...it was planned, planned and planned some more. They thought of virtually everthing.
On a side note, my grandfather owned a bunch of land where Disney World is now. He sold it all back in the late 1950's and early '60's, for next to nothing, as it was just swampland with an occasional orange grove. A few years later, Disney came in and bought it all up and the price shot up 1000% in a few years. Of course, Disney bought it all in secret. No one knew who was buying up all the land or why.
*But it was my 7-year-self that spotted Walt in heated conversation with two Japanese businessmen. *I approached him as one would a deity, because to kids of my generation, he was just that. *He seemed very angry at these two Japanese men, and he towered over both of them. *For some minutes I stared up at him, the father of Mickey and patron saint of amusement parks. *Suddenly he glanced down and spotted his supplicant. *Placing his big hand on my shoulder, he gently shoved me backward. *"Go away kid" he said, "I'm busy."