the games that i played
DESCRIPTION
My biography, photos and gameTRANSCRIPT
BIOGRAPHY Roberto Cea
I was born on February 27, 1978 in San Salvador. For 22 years I lived with my
mother and my two brothers (sister and brother), in the Aurora street,
currently known of the “Three Towers Zone”.
My first school was the “Kinder Centroamérica”, where studied Kinder and
Preparatory, and later studied at the “Berry College”, where I studied until
ninth grade.
In 1993 I started studying my high school, at “Liceo Cristiano Central”,
graduating in 1995 with Bachelor of Biological Chemistry.
During my childhood, my mother taught me about the love of God, and
always I remember going to a church near our house. Thanks to this, now I
am a Christian, and together with my wife, we guide our children in the God´s
way.
At age 24 I married with Beatriz, who had two children: Keren y Roberto.
Keren was born in 2003, and Robert Jr. was born in 2006.
My first job was an Assistant at a Printing Warehouse, which distributed
school textbooks. Later I worked at Spanish Red Cross, Industrias La
Constancia, Templo Cristiano and currently work at World Vision as the
leader of two development programs in Ciudad Barrios, San Miguel.
Photos When I was a kid
Games Pictures
“Salta cuerda” This game was to jump before the rope hit the foot, we could
play two to ten children. I played with boys and girls.
“Chibola” We played with little balls of fiberglass or plastic, and the offer was
to make marbles hitting them as hard as we could to get them out of the
playing field.
“Yoyo” It was a classic game that was to lower and raise two wheels of wood
or plastic attached in the center through a piece of wood where the cord is
tied. The other extremity of the cord is placed on the finger and the cord was
wrapped so doing lowering and raising.
“Capirucho” This game was to try to insert a small wooden stake into the
hole that was the other part of the toy attached by a cord
“Trompo” The “trompo” was a piece of wood shaped like a cone and metal
tip. The game was winding a cord around the “trompo”, and when you
released it to start to spin this so that on contact with the soil will be turning
on the iron tip
“Piscucha” Was a piece of plastic, diamond-shaped, with a cross-shaped
shaft, which was tied a cord in the center of the cross. The cord had to very
long because you wanted was for the piece of plastic came up with the help
of wind as high as could.
Tic, Tac, Toe
Frisbee
Atari
“Salta Burro”
“Columpios”
Bicycle
Scooter
Skates