I hope you remember you loved this

I’m re-posting this for Painted Maypole’s Monday Mission. Today, it’s a children’s story or poem. I thought this one was perfect.

He studies the garden railroad book. The book with real pictures of miniature railroads.

dan

The trains that have real smoke coming from the engines, that climb across miniature bridges, and wind around tiny plants that look like trees.“Can you buy this for me?”

dan

I explain that the trains are too fragile for little hands. Your wooden train is perfect for practicing; perfect for your hands. Grandpas have real trains.

dan

He moves the wooden tracks of his train in a new configuration. He uses Lincoln logs to build houses to create a village for his train. He stacks wooden blocks as buildings. They fall, and he struggles. “How come my Grandpa doesn’t have a real train?”
The book is in his lap again.

dan

He turns the pages, slowly, pausing on some pages, and flipping back the pages to look at some again. He wants to know when we can visit one. I try to think of who I know who has a train like this, so that we can visit.“How about you can get me a train like this, when I’m a Grandpa, as a present.”

dan

I tell him that’s a great idea. Content, he takes his battery engine back to the track he’s built and lets it run across the track.

dan

He watches it go up and down the hills and across the bridges. He puts a bowl of water under the bridge to serve as a lake.

dan

“How will I not forget that I like trains? How will I remember I like trains when I’m old?”

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12 Comments

While at the lake, WiFi is seriously lacking in my life... I can't wait to read your comments.
  1. They are so intense, aren’t they? Everything matters so much. Dudelet (at just turned three) is just starting to take a serious interest in his Brio (epic amounts acquired from all manner of sources) and getting it perfectly correct is so crucial. He’s also finally started building with blocks instead of just knocking them down - castles, a helicopter. It’s the stuff that’s in all the brochures selling you fatherhood :)

  2. What a beautiful post. I hope he keeps that love of trains forever, even when he is a grandpa, and then he will be able share that love with his grandchildren.

  3. [...] upon a time, Daniel came down with a fever. Lethargic, no other symptoms. Pediatrician says, just keep him hydrated, [...]

  4. [...] son is sweet. However, I think he knows a little too much for a guy in kindergarten. The other day, I was [...]

  5. [...] too tired to read them stories, so I collapsed on the couch with my 9 year old. My little ones were building train tracks. They switched off the lights to watch the trains circle the tracks with their lights [...]

  6. We just dug out our box of train stuff the other day. My kids share amazingly well for some reason when playing with them!

    Recently my 3 yo daughter has been saying things like, “when I grow up and you’re a grandma, I’m going to move to (China, California, etc.)” and “I need (her brother’s dirty sock) so I won’t forget him!” Makes me really curious about what her inner conceptions of time and memory really are.

  7. That is such a precious story. He does seem to know a lot!

  8. Oh…so sweet! And his question at the end.

    You tell him: you just do. The things you really love you remember, you just do.

  9. so sweet.
    MQ’s grandpa has a train, and we love it!

  10. [...] faded away, and new friends’ voices that have joined our own. The baby that came, the toddlers that grew, and the math problems it has heard us agonize over at homework time. Then, there were the hail [...]

  11. [...] will be the long hours of play on the floor with his younger brother as they build their wooden train [...]

  12. [...] it would all come down to this. The year would fly by, and before I knew it, he would graduate and our magical mornings at home would soon be over. Forever. God, I’m dramatic. Still, it’s true, you [...]

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