4 years ago, I went to my aunt's wedding and I remember the food was so good that I went back for three more servings and tried all the food from all four stations. After eating, the DJ started playing and everyone started dancing. When my favorite song was played, everyone formed a big circle and two people at a time stood in the center and performed the dance that accompanied the song. When my turn came, everyone started dying of laughter because I was the only child attending the dance. The best part wasn't the food, or the silly dancing, it was the fact that the photographer, who my aunt had hired for the wedding, caught my entire dancing on video and put it into a slideshow film of the moments key to the whole wedding that it's nice to look back on the good times. Another food memory of mine comes from a tailgating experience. In 2012, my dad and I met up with some family friends before the Georgia-South Carolina football game and hung out all day until the game started. We brought tons of food and drinks, but my dad's friends brought even more, so there was plenty of food to go around. One of my father's friends brought me two of his sons who were both close in age. The boys and I would throw football around, play cornhole, and eat grilled hamburgers and hot dogs. It was my first time tailgating and I'll never forget it, even though the team I shoot for lost thirty-five to
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