Full at 
http://cheapmotelsandahotplate.org/2012/12/20/my-christmas-story-for-tatiana/

(Tatiana is my first and just born grandchild)

When I was a boy, I wore mostly hand-me-down clothes. The neighbors next door 
had a son a year or two older than I, about my size, and I got his discarded 
shirts and pants. Grandma or my mother would alter them to fit me better. Maybe 
some cousins’ outgrown outfits found their way into my closet too. I don’t 
remember now.
 

I didn’t like wearing old garments, but lots of other kids wore them so there 
was no shame in it. Besides, I spent my days playing baseball, reading dime 
novels and comic books, building my train set, and inventing games connected in 
one way or another to sports. Who cared about old flannel shirts with two 
pockets and pants that didn’t quite match the size and shape of my legs?
 

Things changed when puberty reared its strange and disconcerting head, 
somewhere between the age of twelve and thirteen. All of a sudden, what hadn’t 
mattered before did now. Girls, cars, clothes. Games and toy trains didn’t seem 
to hold my attention like they used to.
 

At my parents’ urging, I got a job delivering newspapers. The route was large, 
105 customers spread out over more than three miles. The weight of the papers 
carved grooves in my shoulders, especially on Thursdays when advertisement 
inserts nearly doubled the size of the bundles Old Man Nelson delivered to our 
front porch every afternoon. The pay was a meager $6 every two weeks. It was so 
low and the work so hard that within a short time, I confronted my bosses at 
the local newsstand and insisted on a raise. The boy who had taught me the 
route was now in college, and I figured that they wouldn’t be able to teach 
anyone else since only I knew it. Remarkably, they met my demand, boosting my 
wages to $9.80.                                          
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