Time Travel Smiles

A simple post today, inspired by Sarah at The Sunday Spill and her post Because Everything Feels Lighter at Present.

 

Banff Springs Hotel

We stayed here —the Banff Springs Hotel—last night. It’s incredible.

My mom worked in the dining room here in the 60s. The hotel is celebrating its 125th anniversary and she went up for an alumni weekend, except—crazy lady that she is—she didn’t stay the second night and gave it to us instead. AND she took Connor home with her; we kept Ethan and had a lovely night to ourselves.

Banff is where we went for the day on last weekend’s ill-fated Mother’s Day and, at the time, we had no idea we’d be back again so soon, and in such a beautiful setting. We met my mom in the afternoon after her visits and tours etc., and had a chance to wander around and go for dinner. She told us stories about working at the hotel, some of which I knew and some I didn’t. She talked about how she ended up there and what she did. She told us who her friends were and why that time in her life mattered.

This morning we had breakfast in a beautifully furnished lounge with windows that look out over the mountains, which we had to ourselves because apparently no one else had discovered that you can sit in there. Rich mentioned that he had wandered through the gallery that showcases the history of the hotel and saw a 1920s-era picture of people sitting on the ledge right outside the window we were sitting by. The view, apparently, looked almost exactly the same. I found myself wishing someone had perfected time travel so we could go back and surreptitiously stand there as they were having their picture taken. Wouldn’t you love to have the ability to take everything you know now and go back in time to appreciate a place as it was years and years ago? I would spend a lot of my time popping invisibly into scenes and pondering what life would have been like in the same places but at very different times.

And so it was, as you can imagine, a lovely day. An unexpected, quiet night at a nice hotel is a beautiful thing, but I’m especially grateful that I got to see my mom and hear her stories in that environment. It made me smile. It’s as close as I’ll ever get to travelling back in time to be there with her when she was young.

Bring on the Elephants

Sometimes when I think about what I want for my kids I get caught up in the idea of a typical (stereotypical?) childhood. You know, like riding bikes all over the neighbourhood and…whatever else it is that kids are “supposed” to do. (Clearly this is not a well-thought-out angst.) In any case, I feel like we put one important piece in place on the weekend.

We went to the circus!

Big Top

It’s possible that Rich and I were as excited about this as Connor, but he was totally excited. He was dying to see the elephants. As in, kept asking when we were going to see them. Ah, to have no patience whatsoever. But, boy, did we get to see the elephants.

We got VIP passes, which got us a behind-the-scenes tour of what goes on in and around the big top before the show starts. Connor—who normally won’t sit still for anyone—loved the ringmaster when we got to hear him talk about the circus. (And he wasn’t even in full costume at that point.) He told everyone we saw the next day that he got to meet the ringmaster. Maybe if I put on a sparkly coat Connor would listen to me better…

Anyway, then (I feel like we need a drum roll here) we got to visit the elephants.

They were having a bath when we first got there.

circus elephant bath time

And then… Oh my, and then we got to feed them.

Visiting circus elephants before the showWell, Ethan didn’t. His aim with a banana isn’t very good. But Connor loved tossing a banana over the fence and watching the elephant pick it up.

elephant eating banana

Too bad the little bugger wouldn’t let me take his picture. But—ha ha—too bad the little bugger didn’t see the photographer there.

watching elephants

Love the joy on his face. Magic childhood moment, check.

But it got even better inside when he got to have a ride on an elephant. The kid was in heaven. (As was his dad, I think.)
circus-riding-elephant

The show itself was really good. I’m always in awe of what these performers can do.

watching the circus

See? Awe. (And kind of enjoying watching with my biggest boy on my lap.)

The acrobats were amazing. But man, oh man. Better them than me.

circus acrobats

Especially this guy. The grand finale was the Wheel of Destiny, and I was sure this guy was destined to end up taking a tumble. But nope. He walked around on that big ol’ spinning wheel and made the rest of us hold our collective breath. Grand finale indeed.

circus-wheel-of-destiny

The elephants were awesome. The acrobats were incredible. But what I thought was especially cool is that this circus tour is the Zerbini family’s 250th anniversary. Can you imagine? A family business that goes back that far… Their stories at Thanksgiving must be something else.

I have a feeling we’ll be talking about this one at our dinner table for a while too.

Disclaimer: I was gifted VIP passes to the Royal Canadian Circus for my family, but our love for the circus (and the beloved elephants) is entirely our own. 

The Royal Canadian Circus is in Calgary for a few more performances May 16-20. You can buy tickets through their Facebook page, and the code “FUN” will get you 2-for-1 general admission tickets.

Professional photos courtesy Kevin Yee, KISSPHOTO INC.

GFunkified

 

Explore: Life in Pictures, Vol. 4

Alternatively titled: How to Make a Thursday Feel Like a Saturday

We had an adventure last week. The exploring kind. More for me, I guess, since we went somewhere I hadn’t been before that Rich had (and he has the scar to remember it by). It was somewhere I’ve wanted to go since we moved here and now that we’ve been I have no idea why we didn’t go sooner. It’s a town not all that far from here that’s best known for its dinosaurs. The real kind, and, as it turns out, the kind people put on signs to make the most of the millions-of-years-old tourist attraction dinosaurs create.

I figured it would be fun to go, and a dinosaur-themed day was sure to be a hit with Connor. Rich suggested a couple of other stops along the way and, like any good explorer, I was game.

And, oh, was it a good day.

Here, then, is how to make a Thursday feel like a Saturday. It’s really not hard at all.

 

1. Put your kids in the car and drive for an hour and a half until the landscape looks like something from another planet.

hoodoos3

2. Climb up high.

at-hoodoos

3. Take the opportunity to admire the view and get some perspective.

Hoodoos-above

4. (If you do it on the day your baby gets his first tooth, you end up with a sad little dinosaur.)

Ethan-hoodoos

5. But he’s a good sport about it, so play with him anyway.

rich-ethan-hoodoos

5. Find the world’s largest dinosaur.

biggest-dinosaur

5. Climb into its mouth. (Resist the urge to add to your four-year-old’s terror over the situation by making loud roaring noises.)

T-rex-mouth

5. Decide to see what happens if you take the aforementioned scaredy-cat child to a museum with actual dinosaurs.

tyrrell

6. Clarify that the dinosaurs aren’t really real, because the four-year-old thinks real means alive and he seems convinced that the Tyrannosaurus is going to eat him. (Secretly think he’s lucky he’s behaving well that day, otherwise you might have been tempted to see if T-Rex wanted a nibble.) Then measure him next to a dinosaur’s foot (but don’t point out that the dinosaur could crush with one toe any small boys who throw things at their little brothers).

height-dinosaur

7. Watch your boys draw. Smile.

drawing-Tyrrell

8. Then get up close and personal with a wooly mammoth (without the wool).

mammoth

9. Head back out and find some dirt to play in.

dinosaurs-mud

10. Ponder life and the elements and the meaning of time in the context of evidence of the millennia that created amazing things.

Hoodoos

11. Be grateful you live in a place that offers such diversions close enough to do them as day trips with your kids.

Hoodoos-landscape

12. Finish exploring and hit the highway so you’re home in time for dinner.

Hoodoos-landscape2

But stop for ice cream first.

GFunkified

In his Element: Ethan

We sit like this nearly every day around 5 p.m. As the end of the day nears he needs a break but often won’t heed the call of his crib. Instead we sit together, quietly, both of us winding down.

Five months in, we have a lot of practice at this dance. I hold him facing me and slip him onto his right side. He tucks his right arm under my left and wraps it around my waist, then places his head snugly in the crook of my arm as I make space for him. His small mouth opens into an ‘o’ as he waits for a soother. I have one waiting; I give it to him and then pull him close.

We rock.

I sway slightly and he follows my lead, but I don’t talk and I don’t sing. This isn’t the time for whispered stories.

Occasionally he dozes, but today he just stares blankly out the window, his need to turn down the sensory dial so like my own.

He breathes quietly. I can feel his tummy pressing into mine – in and out, in and out.

Suck, suck, suck goes the soother. Then a pause. He’s watching shadows.

He doesn’t look at me, but he does stroke my chest. A recent development, he traces the line just below my collarbone, first in one direction, then the other, a rhythmic reassurance.

His hands are small and soft and chubby, his knuckles still just dimples.

Fully relaxed, he drops his soother and I can feel his breath on my left cheek. It smells like milk, and him.

I’m aware in these moments how precious this time is, how quickly the months will pass until one day we won’t fit just right anymore. He is part of me, this child. He is my own soft breath. He is the lump in my throat.

There are other things that make him who he is, of course – his wide, wide toothless smile and his giggle, laughing on the inhale. His love of stories. His enchantment with song.

But this is what I will most remember. Years from now I will feel his warmth and his weight on my arm. I will remember what it’s like to have a small tummy pressed to mine. I will remember his sweet breath and be glad we had this time, just the two of us, when he was small and we fit just so.

Like I did with Connor, this is an attempt to capture Ethan using descriptors of how I see him in this place and time based on a writing exercise from Use Your Words: A Writing Guide for Mothers*. (And, since I first wrote this, he’s stopped needing this cuddle, which makes me sad but also very glad I wrote about it.) As with Connor’s piece, I’ve deliberately chosen not to include an image in this post and have instead focused on the words. 

(*Same deal: Damn right that’s an affiliate link. I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to work on their writing (whether a mother or not) and if you buy it I want the two pennies I’ll get from having steered you towards something fabulous.) 

 

 

In his Element: Connor

He is four, almost five, and his world is all LEGO, all the time. The entire collection is in his room now, sorted into bins by colour (his dad’s strategy—one he attempts to thwart on a daily basis—for making it easier when asked to help find a certain piece).

This is where Connor is in his element.

And this is how I will always remember him in this time.

He builds from instruction booklets, he replicates from pictures he’s seen online, he creates from his own imagination. The age range on the box means nothing to him; he only occasionally needs help.

Our home rings with the sound of LEGO as he sorts through pieces – loud, rough, like gravel shifting. His fingers stir the bins, the pieces crashing and tumbling, creating a wave of noise. He finds what he’s looking for – a piece attached to another from a previous creation. He grips the locked pieces in his teeth (despite the many times I’ve asked him not to) and pulls determinedly. They click as they come apart.

Occasionally he will disappear, his whereabouts traceable by the rumble from beyond his walls. Hidden behind a closed door and surrounded by multi-coloured bricks, he hears nothing else and has to be called multiple times for dinner.

Sometimes I get asked to play, my role (or perhaps just presence) crucial for reasons that are not always expressed. Sometimes it’s to help find “cool” pieces. Sometimes it’s an invitation, a command: “Let’s get building!”

I’m never sure what he’s building until he’s done. His masterpieces, without fail, include details I could not have imagined.

It’s The Joker’s birthday today, so indicated by the inverted orange cone placed like a birthday hat atop the green hair of the small figure. Two flat, round pieces—formerly a part of an engine, possibly? Though I can’t identify them, he would know exactly what the pieces were and which set they came from—pressed together form a birthday cake, the flame pieces from a firefighting set standing in as candles.

He’s not just building; he’s creating. It’s all about the details. He adds pedals to a vehicle of his own design (this one has two brakes) and constructs a propellor for a helicopter when he can’t find one. Each window in each building is carefully placed. If he wants lights, he builds them. The door knobs always face the right way, the wheels are functional and if he can find a place for a chain or a net he will MacGyver it on.

Each character he adds to the scene has carefully chosen qualities – a policeman can’t have a “bad guy” face; rarely does a LEGO head go without an appropriate hat. Sometimes, as anyone with an imagination knows, a plainclothes hero needs a cape.

I get asked to build certain things sometimes, like a platform or a plane, but rarely get more than a few pieces in before the architect’s vision takes over, relegating me to observer and occasional part locator. I get annoyed by this, but only very slightly.

His instinct is to create; mine is to watch in awe.

This is an attempt to capture my son using descriptors of how I see him in this place and time based on a writing exercise from Use Your Words: A Writing Guide for Mothers*. I’ve deliberately chosen not to include an image in this post and have instead focused on the words. I’ll post Ethan’s tomorrow. 

(*Damn right that’s an affiliate link. I highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to work on their writing (whether a mother or not) and if you buy it I want the two pennies I’ll get from having steered you towards something fabulous.)