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Early this last spring. I write these observations of our mornings for the parents of the children in my care. I also send home lots of pictures. It means a lot to the parents to see what their children do here everyday.
To the left is a fort that took a half hour for the children to put together and they played with it all afternoon. The girls are inside.
Here's how the morning went:
“I’m gonna take a GOOD NAP today!” Four year old Evie tells me as she follows me around the yard. I am gathering the morning’s dog poop before somebody steps in it.
“Yes, didn’t that feel good last week?” She surprised herself and fell asleep last Thursday for the first time since October. She never naps.
“Don’t you just love this beautiful day?” She asks. I do, I really truly do love it.
“Everybody got up an hour earlier today because now we’re on Daylight Saving time,” I tell her. “So maybe you’ll be tired enough to take a nap.”
“I already slept for such a long time. I slept for SIX MILES!” she exclaims into the sunny sky.
I smile all the way to the lilac bush and beyond to lean the poop shovel against the fence.
I’ve arranged a new set of sturdy child sized lawn chairs in a semi-circle under the tree. There is a pink one, a bright blue, a white and a green chair. I didn’t buy two of the same color because I could hear one of the older girls saying as she hangs onto the two of the same color, “you can’ t sit in that one; it’s for my best friend and you’re not my best friend.” So I only bought four, not five, because there were four different colors. That’s the way one starts to think after forty years in this business, sort of like a four year old. But sometimes it’s easier to control the environment than the child.
“Look at these chairs! We can relax!” Evie tells the others. They each sit in a chair, Carrie, the baby, swinging her feet because they don’t reach the ground.
“Take a deep breath.” Evie tells them. “If only we could just talk together.” And they do for several minutes.
Evie tags Kenna then jumps up and runs across the yard yelling, “you can’t catch me!” Then they all run to me, “we want ‘ready-set-go!” So I do the chant: “One for the money, two for the show.....” Kenna’s miles ahead of the others, even though she has shoes that are both for the left foot, both ‘Dora the Explorer’ shoes, one pink and one blue with fur inside. Carrie’s pink ones don’t stay on so I’ve taken them off and now she can get some negative ions from the still wet grass. They ask to do the race again....and again....and again.
“Hey, it’s cold over here.”
“That’s because you are in the shade. Come back in the sun and see if you can feel the difference.”
“Look, we can see our shadow today!”
Carrie and Cody giggle behind me as they pull the mesh cover off the sandbox. I bring out a container of plastic dishes, a round table and their combo sink and stove set. So now they are all ‘cooking’ with sand. When they finish I’ll bring out warm sudsy water for them to wash the dishes.
Everybody’s happy. What a glorious day!
My mind wanders. Where’s Nellie? She’s missed too many days lately. And I’m half expecting a visit from the woman who checks up on us from the food program that reimburses us for food expenses.
Oh, oh, the first tussle of the day. Cody has taken a cup from Kenna’s hand and run away. Kenna chases her but I see she needs help or Cody will soon be flat on the ground.
Evie brings me a sand birthday cake and tells me, “Take it from my hand. Blow out the candles first and make your wish come true.” I obey. You never know....
Now Evie has pushed Cody down. I give her a dirty look so she says, “I did it because I didn’t want her to crash our sand castle.” She and Kenna are now making a sand castle on top of the table and don’t want the other girls to come near. They carry the table closer to the sand box. “Careful, careful,” Evie tells Kenna.
They’re giggling now. Evie tells Kenna, “I’m the server and you are the spanker.” Giggle giggle. “We’re both the spanker.” Giggle glggle, as they both spank the pile of sand on the table.
It’s ten thirty and now they’re all peeling off their shoes. I instruct them to put their shoes on the stairs so we’ll remember to take them up when we go in. Evie barely makes it to the stairs before she’s crying, “Oh! My feet are really really cold! Can you put my shoes back on?” So I do.
Now they’re playing T-ball with a bucket of balls. Tennis balls, white plastic baseballs, colored plastic balls, small rubber balls. It’s still kind of chilly. Carrie has a tennis ball that Maggie, the dog, wants. Maggie jumps and gets it. Carrie looks at me with a shocked expression like she might cry but then she laughs. I’m relieved. It’s a full time job keeping Carrie out of the line of fire. Evie hits the ball over the fence and into the Daisy bush. “Hey, that’s a cool one!” she yells.
Kenna brings me a hula hoop to hold as she jumps through it but before she can begin, Evie grabs it away and runs across the yard with it. Kenna cries, “what’s his doing?” Then she starts crying. It takes a minute to convince Evie that she needs to wait for a turn, then Kenna starts doing her somersaults through the hula hoop. Evie dances in the background singing, “I pooped, I pooped, I pooped.” She’s really into bathroom talk these days. That is developmentally on target for a four year old.
Nellie finally arrives. She lies down on the grass away from the other children so I lay down next to her. There is something so calming about this act. She points to a cloud that looks like a star. Evie joins us and finds a cloud that looks like hair. "Look, there's an 'E'." she exclaims as she points it out to me. It does looks like the “E” that she makes for her name, except the “E” she makes has six points instead of four like this one.
Carrie’s pooped. It’s time to go in to change diapers and fix lunch. Kenna has already gone in to go potty and Evie peed her pants so is inside changing. Good time to make the move inside.