And don't do it to train them. Do it because it's true. It will be uplifting, in that moment to kind of put a blessing on it.
photo by Amber Ivey
And don't do it to train them. Do it because it's true. It will be uplifting, in that moment to kind of put a blessing on it.
If you don't have mud, but you have a sandbox and a hose, that's good too.
Remember some of the basis of learning by feeling and touching—textures, effects, the excitement of messiness—and try to be generous and patient. Childhood is brief.
Kes's mom wrote:
It’s the shadow of a piece of seaweed on a chalk stone. He took the photo because he spotted that it looks like a mermaid 🧜🏼♀️ (a steam punk mermaid perhaps). Taken at Holywell beach, Eastbourne.
Sandra says:
That's on the south end of England, halfway between Brighton and Hastings, for those whose map of England comes from history and literature. (← That was me, until I got to go and run around there some.)The rock above the chalk mermaid is flint. There are medieval churches built of flint. It was mined, underground, by stone-age people.
Be with your children, but don't expect their thoughts and emotions to always be with you.
Flex your make-believe.