Tuesday, February 22, 2011

under the same sky

"Whenever me and Kate see each other, it's like our hearts just JUMP out of our bodies and give each other a big hug!" Maryn exclaimed to her mom as they made their way down the winding canyon road.

Her description could not be more perfect!  Kate and her closest cousin, Maryn (born exactly 10 weeks apart mid-winter 6 years ago) are best friends.  Although on the outside, they seem like opposites (one has long hair, one short; one has blue eyes, one brown; one sings low, the other high), in their heart of hearts, they are the same.

Kind of like their moms.

We, too, are different in many ways, but have always shared a part of our hearts, as sisters.  When we watch our girls together, it is like our childhood is being re-lived and witnessed from the outside.  Only, as if we were twins.  We've often wished we were (except during that one rough year in Jr. High, when we were glad that we weren't!)

Sadly, these two (four) hearts live 600 miles apart.

This past weekend, however, hearts reunited in a weekend spent together.  My sis and I joined our third sister (equally heart-linked, but a few years younger) and parents, too, for some together time at the cabin.  My Kate's heart was full with the company of her cousin.  They played and laughed and hugged and giggled.  And, they stayed up late into the night singing and laughing and loving their hearts' connection.

They made up a song: silly and nonsensical, and EXACTLY the thing Kami and I did together when we were young.  They sang it over and over again.  We smiled at their creativity and laughed at their antics.  We reminisced about our own created songs and plays and performances from so long ago.

And, Kami pulled out the guitar and taught the girls a {real} song about hearts that are linked:
Underneath the same sky
Even though you're not close by
It feels just like
We're right beside each other.
Even though we're far apart,
Your friendship fills my heart.
It's so good to know, we're under the same sky.
Tonight, as my kids bedtime-snacked together, Kate started singing the made-up song.  Dallin smiled and said, "Hey, did you make that up?"  Amazingly, he hadn't heard her singing it, even though she and Maryn must have performed it 100 times over two days.  It's because he was busy being with his heart-linked cousin, too, doing whatever it is boys do when they are together under the same roof.  And, the same sky.

xoxoxo to our cousins, far away!

Monday, February 14, 2011

winner

There used to be more competition in Elementary school.  We had letter grades in 1st grade.  We did 'Whiz Kid' reports and got a ranking that came with a color-coded button you could wear around, like you belonged to an elite club in the school.  There was that water conservation poster contest I took 2nd in, in the 6th grade (blast that Lee Shun and his poster that beat me out!) We knew who the top students were in spelling and math and reading.

And, in my 4th grade class, there was the Valentine's Day Box Contest.

Everyone made a box, as creative as possible, and the teacher chose a winner.  The prize was prestige, maybe a certificate, and {drum roll please} a glitter pen; a pen whose shaft was full of water and glitter which swirled and swayed when you shook it.  It was a treasure to behold. 

My idea for a Valentine's box was really more like a sculpture.  I used saved strawberry baskets (the little green square ones they used to use).  I stacked them up like a pyramid, paper mached the whole thing, and painted it to look like a dice tower.  Don't ask me where I got this idea.  Or why I thought a stack of dice had anything to do with Valentine's Day.  Or why I'd use messy paper mache (which, by the way, got me quarantined to the basement and the little piece of linoleum I couldn't ruin with my project) instead of something reasonable and elementary-school-ish like construction paper.

Whatever the reasons, the result did the trick.  I won.
And, I loved that pen.



My kiddos had a GREAT time making their Valentine's Day boxes this year.  They did most of the work themselves while I was busy with the Littles, and were so proud of their finished products.  No awards were given in their classes, but I would give them both a glitter pen, if I had some!

Because now days, they aren't so competitive in Elementary School. 

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

definitions

se·cede to withdraw formally from

ab·di·cate to give up 

a·ban·don to leave completely and finally; forsake utterly; desert; to give up; discontinue

sep·a·rate -to set apart; disconnect; dissociate; to remove or sever

re·pu·di·ate to cast off or disown

However you define it, the date is set.  March 2nd, me and the braces are finished.  Phew!

 

 

 

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