Your friend Jim George thinks you'd be a great addition to Ricochet, so we'd like to offer you a special deal: You can become a member for no initial charge for one month!
Ricochet is a community of like-minded people who enjoy writing about and discussing politics (usually of the center-right nature), culture, sports, history, and just about every other topic under the sun in a fully moderated environment. We’re so sure you’ll like Ricochet, we’ll let you join and get your first month for free. Kick the tires: read the always eclectic member feed, write some posts, join discussions, participate in a live chat or two, and listen to a few of our over 50 (free) podcasts on every conceivable topic, hosted by some of the biggest names on the right, for 30 days on us. We’re confident you’re gonna love it.

Ladies, Your Ride Is Here
Turn you over to the maenads for the Orpheus treatment?
Seawriter
I started my college career at Michigan State (from the clues he drops, a few years before @seawriter was at U of M), and we certainly took pleasure in recounting such jokes as the one @seawriter offers:
Of course, at that time that was about the only joke we could make about U of M since MSU’s days of football greatness were behind (and far ahead) during my time there. However, I know that @profdlp will find it interesting that I did (thanks to high school friends) find myself in attendance at the 1969 UM v OSU game where Bo Schembechler established himself by guiding the Wolverines to a win over the Buckeyes 24 -12. That made me a life-long Bo fan (although I must mention that one of Bo’s two regular season losses that year was to MSU!). Anyone who beat the Buckeyes was good in my book!
Great story, Seawriter! Those were the days…
Early waterbeds were all sorts of odd sizes. The first ones were up to eight feet by eight feet, and up to two feet deep! A friend of mine had one (circa 1977) about king-sized, with a hard frame, that sat on the floor and was above my knees. It’s a lot easier and cheaper to make a bag with a simple surrounding frame than to make one that can support a couple of tons of water and human without falling apart or cracking the foundation.
Even today, they still sell the “California King” at seven feet by six feet, but they’re a lot shallower than they used to be.
Reading this again triggered a memory. I’ve never owned a waterbed but remember bouncing on one as a child at a relative’s house.
The memory is of renting an apartment in the mid 1990s. Waterbeds must have still been a thing or enough of a thing that one of the items on the rental agreement was that waterbeds were only allowed in ground floor apartments. I wonder if that caveat is still included.
Very likely. Most apartments above the ground floor did not have enough reinforcement to handle that much additional weight.
I dated a girl who’s brother owned a 1950 Studebaker convertible. They had an enormous trunk. He took the back seat out and put in a twin mattress. He would rent it out to fellows to take dates to the drive in theater. He wouldn’t rent it to me however.
In 1989 my brother gave me his “California Twin” waterbed, 7 feet x 4 feet I think, and about 9 inches deep. It was in a box frame. My young granddaughter poked a hole in it, and I managed to get a hose to it and run it out a window before it flooded my house.
I had a waterbed in college. It was offered very cheap, and (being Jewish) I could not resist such a deal (I think it was $75, all parts included). Used it in my third-floor dorm room, and the floor held. I still own it, in a closet somewhere. It never leaked.
When I changed jobs and moved from South Carolina to Georgia many years ago, my wife made me leave behind my beloved traditional King waterbed. She hated it from day #1 and refused to let the movers pack it up. Sigh.
I never had a waterbed, nor did I want one. However, in one apartment I lived in the guy above me had one. One night I walked into my living room and found myself ankle deep in water. My upstairs neighbor’s bed had sprung a leak. The apartment managers moved me to a unit on the opposite end of the building with a mirror image of the apartment I had been in. The first night I got out of bed to go to the bathroom and walked into the wall.
I had a waterbed in college. Lotsa sloshing around. One person moves, everybody moves. (TMI?)
I now have a memory foam mattress. Now, when my sweetie gets out of bed, I never notice and keep on snoring. Nice!
Great story and great storyteller! I got a good laugh out of it!
My parents had a waterbed right up until my little brother attacked it with a fork. They patched it up with duct tape, but it died a slow death.
At Cleveland State we said that there was a pretty girl behind every tree. Of course, being in the heart of Cleveland there were only about three trees on the whole campus…
Ricochet is getting as bad as the Daily Caller. I love it.
Hilarious! Thank you for this post!
This conversation is part of a Group Writing series with the theme “Water”, planned for the whole month of April. If you follow this link, there’s more information about Group Writing. The schedule is updated to include links to the other conversations for the month as they are posted. May’s topic is Winning, please sign up!