Anonymous wrote:Let me introduce you to the self-devised fun on my family’s long car trips circa 1977;
- “spider bite” - remain motionless or the spider (a sibling’s splayed out hand usually resting on your bicep or knee) or the spider will “bite” you at the slightest movement, even going over a bump.
-ghost writing: trace out each letter of a message on a sibling’s back or palm…great way to convey fart jokes or use shockingly bad words to each other
-punch buggy and padiddle
-make dad honk the horn madly every time we saw the sign welcoming us to a new state
-honk at cows and horses out in farm fields
Anonymous wrote:Let me introduce you to the self-devised fun on my family’s long car trips circa 1977;
- “spider bite” - remain motionless or the spider (a sibling’s splayed out hand usually resting on your bicep or knee) or the spider will “bite” you at the slightest movement, even going over a bump.
-ghost writing: trace out each letter of a message on a sibling’s back or palm…great way to convey fart jokes or use shockingly bad words to each other
-punch buggy and padiddle
-make dad honk the horn madly every time we saw the sign welcoming us to a new state
-honk at cows and horses out in farm fields
Anonymous wrote:You also kissed your fingertips and touched the ceiling when driving through a yellow light.
Anonymous wrote:Punchbuggy green no punch backs.
Anonymous wrote:Punch buggy is nothig. We used to violently threaten people that their mother's back would be broken if they stepped on a crack in the sidewalk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not an urban legend.
We definitely did this growing up.
We also played Padiddle....one headlight of a car coming at you and you yelled paddidle and hit the ceiling of the car. As teens it would allow us to kiss someone else in the car.
Yes, I’m from New England and we played both of these games. My DC, 12, plays it now.
We did both in MD and my husband's family did in MA as well. Late 90s graduates.
We played the point game where you assign value to pedestrians and other things you might hit with the car. That one I think was more disturbing.
That was based on the movie "Death Race 2000," starring David Caradine, I think.
NP, no I don’t think so because we did the points game in the 90s.