Earlier this week I spent the day in the company of
my granddaughters, ages 3 and 5. They had been twirling and
plie-ing at dance camp all morning where I picked them up (complicated by an hour's lag
between their finishing times). Then a quick stop for a happy meal to eat in
the car. We then stopped by and picked up grandpa and were off to the outdoor
old-fashioned Burnaby Village Museum. We walked through and looked in the
buildings exclaiming over this and that – the one room schoolhouse, the general
store, barbershop, etc - we did the scavenger hunt, and had an ice cream break
in the café. This was followed by a ride on the historic carousel before
walking across the little bridge back to the parking lot. We had had a lovely time and were
all moving just a bit more slowly than when we arrived.
However, almost immediately the 5 year old said
eagerly,
"What are we going to do now,
Grandma?"
I said, Taking you home.
Her response was a gloomy, "Awww, but I want
to go play at your house. And we haven’t even gone to the farmer’s market yet”!
During the drive home in the car she declared she
was tired. No doubt. She'd had a busy day! However, I figured in an hour
she'd be rested and rarin’ to go again.
Me? not so much!
The same day I read the following by C.S. Lewis
which sums up exactly how I feel quite often—
... I am frantically busy: and though I get no more tired now than I
did when I was younger, I take much longer to get un-tired afterwards.
(From The Collected Letters of C.S. Lewis, Volume III
Compiled in Yours, Jack)
Compiled in Yours, Jack)
1 comment:
That is so true! It is all about becoming un-tired afterward! It all makes sense now!
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