Thursday, March 04, 2010

Hiding

Yesterday Saffron was excited to be trusted with tending Willa alone
for the first time (in America, since those three years in Ethiopia,
of course). I had a lunch appointment, and Saffron had stayed home
from school.

She called me several times to give me an excited play-by-play, but
the best was when I came home to find they had barricaded the front
door with a cooler. Apparently, they found this more protective than
the boring deadbolt I had suggested.

This morning I finally succumbed to that nap I've needed for a week. I
turned a movie on for Willa in the room next to me. When I woke up her
movie had ended and she was hiding behind the couch in the other room.

"Boo!" she said as she jumped out. She was giggling, but she explained
that she had been hiding since her movie ended both because she wanted
to jump out at me, and because she was scared.
"Next time if you're scares just come in my room," I said.

You can take the girls out of the place where they had to preserve
themselves, but you can't take the preservation out of the girls.
----------------------------------

Willa is just now eating lunch (well, a few bites when she can fit
them in to her busy schedule) while she plays an African drum, and
gives me a play-by-play of her thoughts. This includes:

-"This kitchen?" said while pointing at her meet. Chicken and Kitchen
are forever confused.

-A recount over and over of how she jumped out at me.

-Accusations of me "copping" (copying) Saffron because I dared to make
stew, which is very much like the Ethiopian wadt Saffron makes, minus
her three-alarm spices. "Mom you watch Toukoul cook and then you make.
Why you copy?" (Willa refers to Ethiopia as 'Toukoul,' the name of the
orphanage.)

"Actually, this is America wadt and my mom made it when I was a
little girl."

"Oh! So you go Toukoul even you face no brown and then you grow big
and mama."

So apparently, if my mom ever cooked this then we must both have lived
in Ethiopia--even though our faces are not brown.

And . . . Back to the drum. You gotta love this stuff.

Emily Mabey Swensen

4 comments:

Brooke said...

Man, this little Willa is a fire cracker! She is great. I'm getting all kinds of comic relief from the things she spouts out. You love to hear them from little ones, as they have no filter between their brain and their mouth. Very cute little Willa.

Sovic Clan said...

That little one is a riot!! The Minnie Mouse outfit with ears and all was just classic!! Also the bike helmet worn in the car, and walking to school should be a must have of this years fashion!

I also spied on Jasper while doing the Kindergarten's homework bags. He was sitting in the hall by me reading a Dr. Seuss book to one of the Kindergartens. That kid sure has a cute soft spot for little ones:)

MsScreensiren said...

It will be so sad when Willa speaks like the rest of us.

Charlotte said...

Sooo cute.