Lucky for me, having a birthday that took place in winter meant
that my birthday parties could not be held in a park, the backyard, or some
other free place that could contain and amuse several children and not require
my parents to hide their breakable knick knacks. Birthday number four (as best as my mom and I
can remember) took place in January of 1985 at none other than Chuck E. Cheese’s. Besides the shear awesomeness of celebrating
the big oh-four at the place where “a kid can be a kid,” that was the birthday
where I got the best gift any little girl from my generation could have hoped
for… a Cabbage Patch Kid (CPK).
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I don’t remember every detail of that day but I do remember
her; a dimpled, bald baby, dressed in a yellow, knit outfit with a yellow bonnet
and smelling like baby powder. I named her Jennifer and she would be my
favorite doll for many, many years. Even
my CPK that could move her mouth and talk could not come close to knocking
Jennifer from her proverbial pedestal.
My most memorable time with Jennifer was when we left my
grandparents’ house in Ohio to go back home from a family visit. I think we lived in Connecticut at the time
(on the east coast for sure) so it was going to be a long ride home. Somewhere into our trip I realized that Jennifer
had gotten left behind! We were far
enough away that it was inconvenient to go back but thankfully not super far
away. A good heart wrenching cry from yours truly made my dad turn the car back
around to get my baby. I think I spent
most of the ride home apologizing to her for my forgetfulness.
Each CPK came with a birth certificate/adoption certificate
that listed the name of the doll and gave you something to sign showing that
you adopted him or her and would care for them.
I would sometimes change the name but I think Jennifer was the name mine
came with.
The funniest
thing to me as a child was Xavier Roberts’ (the creator and also a character in
the CPK story) signature on the butt of the doll. Like who decided on that?
There was a
cassette (remember those?) that came out sometime in the 80’s with Christmas
songs that were sung by the CPK. I
listened to that every night near Christmas and all night Christmas Eve when I
couldn’t sleep because I was too excited.
The Cabbage Patch fad was, to my generation, what the Tickle-Me-Elmo and Furby craze would be to future generations. Parents would fight each other just to get one to take home to their daughters.
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