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Three good things happen every day

Posts Tagged ‘madagascar’

Reflections

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

1.  Reception

2.  Remembrance

3.  Remedies

“Thankyou Mummy for waking me up when Daddy got back.”  In the middle of the night.  Son 1 aged 4y 5m, climbing into the bed. Being sarcastic.  No memory of my carrying him down two flights of stairs for Daddy cuddles.   The Man being back is a Good Thing.  Yesterday marked 22 years of us Being Together.  One day Son 2 aged 17m will feel special because his parents were together for well over 20 years before he was born….  Two pairs of hands, so things were easier, although kick off was still 0615.   Son 1 was excited, Son 2 was happy but clingy.  Now both parents were around, he wasn’t going to get fobbed off with the Second Best one.  

We went to a Garden with a friend and her 3 year old.  There were nature trails for the children with treasure hunts, and we needed seaweed from the beach, so we trailed down the long steep woodland.  Son 2 walked a bit, was carried a bit, picked up gravel a bit.  Son 1 and 3 year old friend found sticks and fought, and looked in ponds for fish and frogs, and trampled through bamboo clumps.  Son 1 fell over and smashed his nose and forehead on the path.  The sky was blue, the sun was warm, there were few other visitors.  The big pond at the bottom of the valley was filled with foot-long rainbow trout, clamouring underneath a viewing platform, suggesting many packed lunches have headed their way.  Last time I’d stood there I was miscarrying Son 1 and a half.  The memories were vivid. Who we were with.  Son 1 aged 2y 2m in wellies, saying “I’m stuck!” when his foot was jammed between two rocks.   Holding his sticks all the way down.  The bleak, hopeless, misery.  We didn’t get onto the beach that time, so the vivid flashback vanished as we walked up and down the steps. All three boys loved the seashore.  Son 1 and his friend charged around, climbed rocks and balanced on walls.  Son 2 scrunched on the shingle and headed, time and time again, for the sea.   

Back home again and we were all exhausted.  Son 1 and I watched Madagascar.  Son 2 played “beds,” laughing, giggling, cuddling Mummy, and finally pulled out the Thomas Wooden Railway.  Son 1 joined us and we built a track and Son 2 put electric trains on it and added carriages.  He pushed the engines up the bridge and watched intently as they rolled down the other side.  At tea time I made pizza while they both went out into our miniscule yard with The Man, who was trying to put an artificial grass playsurface down across the lethal concrete.  Son 1 rushed for his toy tool set,  hammmered walls and tried to fit pieces of astroturf together.  He was in raptures, helping Daddy, playing with his tools, knowing what the job was.   Son 2 tottered about and fell over a lot.  They were both asleep in minutes of us getting them in their beds.

A Whole New World

Saturday, January 31st, 2009

1. Australia

2. Madagascar

3. Nether Lands

Discussion and debate this morning. Son 1 felt he was up to his sleepover.  We felt he needs to show he can stay in his bed and be quiet overnight before we can let him out after 10pm.  Plan B was his first ever cinema trip.  A child-free colleague from The Office phoned.  “We’ll be in the Big Town later,” I said. “We’re going to see Madagascar.” “What’s that?” “Like Australia. Only with cartoon animals”    “Oh.” “Australia the film?” “Yes I know what Australia is.  I just don’t do animation.”    Neither did I when I lived in BC World.

We took Best Friend to Madagascar.  Horrid Henry on the CD in the car on the way, for which his Mother will thank me later.  Expose them to reality in literature first.  I loved Madagascar.  I think they did too.    Towards the end Son 1 kept telling Best Friend to come with him to investigate something.  It was the aftermath of a vat of popcorn dropped on the floor by a child at the end of our row.  I just about managed to keep Son 1 from eating it.   We want to see Monsters and Aliens next.

Son 1 went to Best Friend’s to play, and The Man and Son 2 aged 16m were just heading into The Town when I got back.  We all trogged round Boots, M and S and Argos.  Son 2 asked to get out in Argos, and he walked happily in his reins, calling and cooing, chasing pigeons, fingering plants, pointing in windows, peering in shops.  He walked most of the way home.  Back in the kitchen he was playing beautifully with his ambulance.  I  joined him.  Even my barely-there sense of smell could tell his nappy was dirty, so he must have been stinking. “He needs a new nappy,” I said to The Man. “It’ s such a shame because he’s so into his game.”  Son 2 toddled off to the back of the house.  The changing mat lives between the buggy and the washing machine.  He brought it back into the kitchen and triumphantly put it on the floor.  When I’d done his nappy, he picked the dirty nappy bag up and plopped it out the back - just like I always do.    What a perfect child.