We had just purchased the latest edition of the World Book Encyclopedia, so I spent much of my free time for days after “Psycho” reading about psychology and psychosis. The sounds of the shower scene were unmistakably murderous. So I wasn’t allowed to watch “Psycho,” but I listened to it, and it was terrifying. “People are different, and some of us drink, but I’m sure lots of people don’t go to sleep right away.” “How many times have you ever been awake after being in bed for an hour?” “I don’t think we ought to call it creepy. It’s amazing how often I go in to kiss him good night and find him tucked in and acting like he’s asleep, but his eyes are open. “What is it, exactly, that you want me to do?” my father asked. Sally and I were supposed to sleep in the back seat during the second movie, but my parents had discovered they didn’t really have options when I didn’t, couldn’t, or wouldn’t sleep.
GROWN UPS 2 MUSCLE WOMAN MOVIE
My parents had taken us to the Bordertown drive-in movie theater to see “Operation Petticoat” and “Psycho.” My mother loved Cary Grant and Tony Curtis, so she was upset to discover that she had mistaken Anthony Perkins for Tony Curtis, but since we had already paid she decided we would stay and watch it anyway. I understood right away, but I was not as nervous about the idea of water getting put inside me to clean out where I stored my poop as I was afraid of spending half an hour in my parents’ bathroom. Sally asked her to explain how an enema worked three times.
She said enemas were good for us and that grown ups gave themselves enemas all the time. In May, my mother decided to give me and Sally an enema every Saturday morning.