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Blake has a tent that is shaped like a car that fits over a twin mattress. I have it sitting on top of the full sized futon in the living room and we are having fun watching vocabulary DVDs on the ibook in the tent.
When I got into the tent Blake said, "We are in the tent."
Oh, yeah.
The ibook came back on Friday. Who knew the service would be so quick?
When I got into the tent Blake said, "We are in the tent."
Oh, yeah.
The ibook came back on Friday. Who knew the service would be so quick?
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Date: 2004-07-18 10:14 am (UTC)<-- big smile.
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Date: 2004-07-18 10:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-18 02:25 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-07-18 02:31 pm (UTC)When I was Blake's age, I had a big cardboard tepee that my father would put up for me in the living room on snowy/rainy/mom-is-sick days. He provided me with a manual Royal typewriter that he'd had in college and typing paper to play with. Tap, tap, tap. No DVDs.
I always wonder with my kids what things they will remember like that -- like I so distinctly remember the smell and touch and sounds inside of that tepee, or hiding inside the cloth-covered Jungle Book tunnel, or just the feel and smell of the shag carpeting in my parents' house. Maybe Blake will be all about the car tent.
go blake
Date: 2004-07-21 11:50 pm (UTC)Makes sense that Blake likes the tent. Most kids do, but especially for him. I would imagine that it's far less overwhelming. There are less cues to get overwhelmed about, and the environment is easier to control.