But it usually wasn't about anything in particular*, just words slung together, because I mostly didn't know how to convey meaning--I just thought rhyming and alliteration were kind of cool.
This reminds me of a friend's younger brother I once knew. He understood the structure and delivery of jokes, but he didn't seem to understand what made them funny. As such, he would come out with some pretty bizarre ones ("Q: Why was the plant sad? A: Because it was on fire").
Hehe, yeah, I remember doing some of those myself. I used to power through joke books and just read them like they were anything else, but I didn't find them funny at all. Back before I developed a sense of humor, which really did take between 15 and 20 years, I'd see the "what's the cross between an x and a y" jokes and try to follow the format.
I ended up with "What's the cross between a car and a motorcycle? A bicycle."
I mean, come on, how absurd do you have to be >_>
Oh, thought you're in USA. Hm, if it's Europe and rural what most people do here in Bosnia should work then. Over here couples with kids take turns watching each other's children, and kids love getting some playtime with other kids their age. I didn't want to bring that up because AFAIK something like that would be completely unthinkable in USA.
We do have so-called playdates and things like that, but there the issue is less with trusting other parents and more about being worried about being sued/liability. Or so I think, anyhow. It'd be unimaginable to ask another parent to take care of your kids for long periods of time, yeah, because over here the obligatory individualism means that another parent cannot discipline your children, period, in case they teach a lesson the parents wouldn't like.
I think that's pretty silly, but that's how it is.