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Today was perfection. We got to hang out with my four favorite unschooling families at the ocean (and it was WARM!). The children built and floated rafts, built bridges, dug holes, laid in the sand, ate lots of food, SWAM! and us mama's got to talk and admire each others (and our own) children. It could not have been a more perfect day and it did my heart good. Seems this may become a regular spring/summer/fall meeting of like-minded families and I couldn't be happier!
The bedtime story tonight was quite fitting as it took place on an ocean and on shore... Amos & Boris by William Steig. A sweet but sort of sad story of the friendship between a mouse and whale - both mammals (they are delighted to discover) and both holding the knowledge of what it means to be a true friend.
Blue: Why do cats eat birds?
Me: Well, its all part of the food chain. (note to self: explain the food chain when I'm not so damn tired)
Blue: Do people eat birds?
Me: Yes.
Blue: What kind?
Me: Chickens, pheasants, quail, duck...
Blue: Do they eat chickadees?
Me: I don't think so.
<<5 minutes later>>
Blue: What's horse?
Me: What do you mean?
Blue: What food comes from a horse?
Me: I'm not sure. I've never eaten horse... maybe burgers?
Blue: (contemplative pause) I've never eaten a horse burger.
(note to self: I need to get a digital recorder so I can capture these conversations and play them back to her when she's a woman.)
Its funny how our children can bring to surface so many memories of our own childhood. I remember thinking that if someone broke their arm or leg it actually "broke" off. And I had a friend who thought that mountains were just really tall trees.
My littlest (age 4, whom I'll refer to by her middle name) and I had another "time for bed and I'm gonna get deep with you, Mom" conversation last night...
Blue: "What if the earth broke into a bunch of pieces?"
Me: "Well, we would probably spin off into space and die."
(some of you might think she is too young to be talked to so bluntly about death but its been an ongoing conversation, initiated by her, since she was 3 and her grandfather died.)
Blue: "So how do the houses on the bottom of the earth not fall off?"
Me: "Remember, gravity keeps us and our homes pulled to the earth so we won't fall off."
Blue: "I'm glad I don't live down there!!"
She certainly makes me think. And laugh.