Dear Gwen,
Today, you are ninety-three months old.
Well, we had Christmas! On Christmas Eve we had your Gramma
Karen and Grandpa Keith over for brunch and gift-opening. You pretty much
cornered your Grandpa and made him play with you the whole time – which I’m
sure he didn’t mind at all. On Christmas morning it was just the three of us,
relaxing together, enjoying each other and our many many gifts, and staying in
our jammies pretty much all day until it was time to go to Gramma’s for a
delicious dinner. As always, we all got very spoiled, and had a really lovely
and low-key Christmas.
There were other adventures over Christmas break, of course.
I took you and your friend Rhyan to the Winter Wonderland skate, an annual
tradition. And then there was the day we drove up to Mt. Washington with our
friend Tricia and her two boys, to go snowshoeing together. For the last couple
of winters, you have complained and asked, “What’s the point of winter if there
isn’t even any snow?” Well, there was no lack of snow on the mountain! We
walked around a beautiful winter wonderland, and you got to build a snowman,
make snow angels, and get your fill of snow (both literally and figuratively –
why can kids never resist eating snow?).
For New Year’s Eve, you and your Dad went to the Family
Finale at Beban Park (I was performing at the theatre that night so couldn’t
join you). And a couple of days later, we hosted an enormous open house where
you got to play with a wide variety of kids throughout the day in the upstairs
loft. There were crafts, board games, general shenanigans, and, as the evening
wore down, the half-dozen kids who were left started producing plays for the
small yet appreciative audience of adults. Has the theatre bug bitten you?
This has been the month of broadening your pop culture
horizons. When I was a kid, VCRs were just becoming a thing – I can remember my
parents renting a VCR, along with a few movies, once in a while before they
decided to take the plunge and buy their very own. This meant that if I wanted
to experience the excitement and novelty of watching a movie, I watched what
they chose for us to watch – and I was exposed to a lot of media that wasn’t
necessarily geared towards a kid’s tastes or sensibilities. Sometimes this
meant I saw something scarier than I should have, but this was infrequent – for
the most part, watching “grown-up” movies meant that I had a broader and more
mature taste than I would have otherwise. Set against this backdrop, your
stubborn insistence on watching the inane mind-numbing treacle that is most
children’s television programming – and the fact that Youtube and Netflix make
this garbage constantly available - makes me CRAZY. This past month, however,
we’ve made some serious progress on the road to better taste in movies.
It all started, of course, with the news that there was to
be a new Star Wars movie. Your dad decided to sit down with you over several
weeks and watch the original trilogy. It sometimes took two nights to get
through a whole movie, but you were super interested and engaged with the story
and characters, and looked forward to the next movies with excitement. We
finished watching the third movie right before Christmas, and then on Christmas
Eve Day – after spending the morning with your grandparents, eating waffles and
opening presents – the three of us went to the theatre to see “The Force
Awakens”. It was SO awesome to sit with you and your dad in a theatre full of
people who were just as excited as we were, and to know that you were enjoying
the movie too! What a big milestone, to see your first not-kids’ movie on the
big screen. It was such a fun day! We then got to teach you the important
concept of “spoilers” and how if anyone asked you about the movie, you should
just say “I saw it, it’s great, and you should see it too.”
The fun continued over Christmas break, when we got you
started on a healthy diet of Red Dwarf – finally, the introduction of British
humour! That wise old Santa had brought us the entire box set of Red Dwarf
DVDs, for our family to watch together, and we’ve watched several so far. You
really enjoy the show, its humour, and the two main characters. Oh, and the
cat, of course!
About a week ago, Dad decided it was time to show you The
Martian. I’m not sure the average seven-year-old would like this movie, but you
are very, very, interested in space, and so we thought you would probably like
it. And you sure did. You were completely enthralled for the entire movie, no
small feat as it is over two hours long! We had a brief discussion about all
the adult language you were going to hear, and how we didn’t want to hear any
of it coming out of your mouth. So far, so good on that score.
It is SUCH a blessed relief to have you interested in movies
that we are interested in too! This has opened up the doors to sharing many
more favourites with you, and we’re very much looking forward to that.
Speaking of favourites, last weekend I got to do something
super-amazing with you: go to a Raffi concert! What a wonderful treat to sing
and dance along to so many beloved songs, along with my very best girl. Like
many others my age, Raffi is the music I grew up with, and it was a joy to see
him in person; a joy made more than double because I got to share it with you.
Raffi himself is a warm, lovely, wise, and inspiring man.
And one more story of pop culture. On January 10, David
Bowie died. He was a songwriter, musician, and actor, an extremely influential
and boundary-pushing artist for many decades. His death shocked and saddened
people of many nations and generations. That day on social media, there were
countless memes, tributes, memories, and mournful posts shared. And that
afternoon, you came home from school and told us that in music class, you’d
learned a song about an astronaut. “It’s a story-song, a song that tells a
story!” you told us excitedly, and sang us some of the words you could
remember: “I’ve been floating in a tin can … far above the world ...” Yes, sure
enough, your music teacher had exposed you to David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” (aka
Major Tom). As you described it, your teacher explained that the song was
written by one of his very favourite songwriters, and he had then played his
guitar and sung the song to your class. Among all the other stories and
tributes that were shared that day, the image of this teacher (whom I’ve never
met, so I’m sure my mental image is way off) earnestly sharing that song with a
class of six- and seven-year-old kids as a way of honouring Bowie’s memory and
sharing his talent, touches me deeply.
Well, I guess that’s it for this month, Gwen! As always, I
love you to the moon and back, and I can’t wait to see what the next month will
bring.
Love,
Mom
1 comment:
<3 She's so big.
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