
Gratitude is what we can feel when we are able to slow down enough to really pay attention to what surrounds us – and, it’s a very powerful force – therapy, if you will – for whatever ails the minds and soul. Just recently, I had the pleasure – no, the honor- to substitute in a kindergarten class in a local school. There is nothing that quite compares with the uplifting feeling you get when you get to spend time with five and six year olds.
It’s all so very magically simple, going back to the basics – a truly mindful, meditative, and Zen like experience. From listening to the melodious, youthful sound of their voices singing the songs commemorating the alphabet, the days of the week, the months of the year, and the numbers, 1 to 100, to counting the straws marking the days spent to date in school – bundles of 10 and 1 – your basic math, to guiding them through a dot-to-dot and coloring of a Chinese New Year Dragon – (and getting to do this myself,) to complimenting any and all efforts, or kindly suggesting that they “color in the white parts,” no matter the inattentiveness to staying inside the lines, and the look of pride when they completed the work, and plopped it into the basket, ready for a free time of puzzles, or an ipad reviewing letters, sounds, and words, to recess and the purely happy, excited, and frenzied sounds, emitted while sliding, running, climbing, hopping, and swinging.
Once inside there’s snack time while watching a story unfold on a television, followed by the sharing of precious items, to be guessed by their classmates before the unveiling-. The smiles, the lightness, and the calm of the day are so very palpable. This whole scene is repeated a second time for the afternoon class, but this time, I ‘”get” to do some “prep work” for their Valentine activities, a pleasantly repetitive array of cutting, pasting, and creating different sized hearts with a die-cut machine, which is pure and satisfying magic!!! As I work – play? – I then start to revel in the memories of my own children at this age and remember nostalgically the same innocence with a smile and happy heart.
Aaron at five: ” the Rubber Band Boy,” he was dubbed as he could not sit still, but enjoyed rolling around endlessly on the carpet at school, his voracious appetite for any and all books he/we would read together – the courage he mustered up on the first day of school, evident when I asked how it went, “I wiped away a tear and goed inside to listen to what the teacher had to say,” – his determined repetitiveness of practicing his letters and numbers over and over again to perfection – creating highly imaginative stories dictated to me, the scribe, and illustrated by him – walking/skipping to school with his favorite Jungle Book backpack, singing, “The Bare Necessities,” – running backwards in tee ball – 3rd, 2nd, 1st, then home, and jumping up and down in excitement, unconcerned that his teammates had already headed outfield – his love of the Ghostbusters, “his guys,” – speeding towards me and a baby Joanna as I picked him up and swung him around – to his utter delight and mine – arriving home for a snack and a restful visit to Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood.
Joanna at five – smiling – always smiling, and her infectious giggling at the slightest bit of silliness, any silliness – all the goofy faces made when told to smile for the camera – her insistence at wearing her favorite red velvet dress with the gold bow to every event – big or small – for the entire year – dancing, tapping, prancing on stage, donning top hats, tutus, tights, and bling- once falling during a recital, and bouncing right back up without a tear while we held our breath – pretending to “jam” on an electric guitar in front of an imaginary audience in the wall length mirror at the dance studio while everyone else was paying attention to the instructor – insisting on the reading of Wacky Wednesday, her favorite book every night – choosing the infamous white rubber rat as a souvenir, playmate, and sleeping companion at the end of our lower Seattle tour – the rat that eventually turned a filthy black and was lost and refound on numerous occasions amid sad tears on her part and ours- her love of SpongeBob.
My children are now amazing adults with whom I love to spend time, and the children in the class will one day be adults, but the innocence and goodness that is childhood is still in each and everyone of us. It behooves us to spend time with children and really notice them and what they do – for therein lies the key to being happy – to be present in the moment – to keeping it all-simple.



With a flurry of thoughts inundating and overwhelming my mind, brought on by the intense sentimentality of this season, I struggle to sift through them all to reach the memories that make me feel lighter, make my heart smile, and there I rest thinking of my dad.
The long Thanksgiving weekend has come to a close, and I sit and revel in the newly formed memories of the precious time spent with my family. I ponder these thoughts as well as conjure up images of the special people in my life who are no longer here – my parents, other relatives, and friends, and to that list I now add my sister, Tina. Though her passing happened in June, and the celebration of her life in August, it was just recently that I returned to the cemetery where her name is engraved below my parents on the crypt they now share, making it as real as it will ever get.


