Lessons
Learned…
Creativity
Unwrapped 7
Untidy.
Creativity is frequently on the untidy side because if one’s imagination is to
fully cut loose, it cannot be troubled, encumbered, or held guiltily captive to
neat and orderly cleanliness. We were city slickers, albeit creative city slickers, who moved heart and
home to the country, place of boundless imaginative exploration and wonder
amidst rolling acres and nature’s treasures.
Toys schmoys. All we needed was to be outside, for high adventure
existed everywhere in nature’s magnificent playground. In every season, the
creative tools of play included: rocks, mud, creeks, sticks, flowers, trees, ravines,
leaves, and winding mysterious paths. The cast of our creative play included:
brothers, sisters, cousins, neighbors, several Labrador retrievers, a few barn
cats, and occasionally invited guests such as parents, aunts, uncles, or
grandparents, but only if they brought their imaginations and didn’t mind
getting muddy. Imaginations grow and
flourish in this wonderfully rich
potting soil known as the countryside. It was late October, and the colored
leaves had all come down. Rain had soaked this leafy carpet leaving a rather
spongy, springy floor. The paths of the ravine as well as its steep sides were
covered in this soft, springy, muddy carpet.
It looked delightfully slippery to the very knowing eyes of the cousins
who were well acquainted with every nook and cranny in every season of this
beloved playground. Guests, friends were coming over to play while the moms
shared coffee and conversation. The guests were very neat and clean and looked
unmistakably like inside playing kids. We were crushed but readied our inside
play accouterments to accommodate our guests. Could we play outside, they
queried? Really; it’s a bit dirty out there? We never get dirty; it would be
fun. Yes, it definitely would, but are you sure? It’s really, really dirty out
there. Good. Okay then. So off we cousins went with our guests to the slippery
slopes of the ravine, while the moms enjoyed their fellowship. Time and mud and
hilarity and unmatchable fun swirled around these cousins and guests as run
after run after run after run we rode down the side of the ravine on the back
of our pants. Caked head to toe in thick, thick mud, we all looked as if we had
been dipped in creamy milk chocolate, and the sight of us to one another evoked
constant, raucous peels of wild laughter from each of us as we trekked back to
the house. Our mothers saw us coming from a long way off and surely heard us as
well for they met us at the door with cameras first and then towels. They knew
the deep value of creative play, they knew the blessing of play’s joy, and they
knew that under all of that mud, which would eventually wash away, there were
gargantuan heart smiles and spectacular memories of some slightly untidy, delightful childhood
play that would last a lifetime.
No comments:
Post a Comment