Dear Margaux,
I cannot believe it has been a year
since I wrote your last birthday letter.
Time has really flown. This
year has been full of changes for you.
The biggest change is that you have turned into a little girl and have
very little “baby” left in you. You
got a big girl bed and started sleeping through the night. You started Pre-K at
a new school, you’ve started to write, you’ve started to spell, and you’ve lost
two teeth. You’ve surprised your
dad and I with your love of boys.
You don’t find most girls very interesting, but boys you are crazy
about. There is one boy you are
particularly fond of. About a
month after school started, we heard you singing his name all over the
house. Further inquiry led to the
discovery that you had a case of puppy love. With awe in your voice, you told us that he taught you the
word phalanges. I love that you love the smart
boys. Please don’t ever let that
change. You have also divided the
boys in your class into the good guys and the bad guys. You say the good guys are kind and nice
to everyone, but the bad guys use potty language and are only nice to each
other. You don’t realize it now,
but this isn’t just true on the playground, so stick with the good guys. But, Margaux, befriend girls, too. Girl friends will support you and bring
a richness to your life that cannot be measured.
You still love pink, purple, and
dirt. Your favorite show is a wildlife documentary called Growing Up Wild. You will watch this for hours and never
tire of it. It has also inspired
some questions about reproduction that have caught me quite off guard. I am trying to answer your questions
directly without providing more information than you are asking for. We explained that you should keep this
information to yourself. You said,
“It’s just chicken eggs and babies, doesn’t sound like much of a secret.” Your favorite book is the Complete
Winnie the Pooh by A.A. Milne. I
read this chapter book aloud to you every night for almost a month. We now can spot an Eeyore or a Tigger
from a mile away. Turns out Mr.
Milne had a keen eye for personality and pretty much every one you meet is
represented by someone in the Hundred Acre Wood. Your favorite thing to do is play with your stuffed animals.
I’ve heard moms complain that their house is overrun with stuffed animals and
they never actually get played with.
We are up to our eyeballs in stuffed animals, but every single one gets
attention from you. Sometimes they
are sick and you treat them with your doctor kit, sometimes they are fierce and
you are hiding from them, but nine times out of ten, one of them is having
babies.
You are brave, my girl. Today, your fifth birthday, was your
first (and I pray last) time to get stitches. You had an accident on the playground. It may or may not have involved one of
the bad guys. Dad and I took you
to the doctor and you got three stitches in your forehead. The anesthetic didn’t kick in until the
last one, and yet you stayed still. Yes, you cried, but you never tried to get
off the table. I am often
impressed with how tough you are.
I don’t where you get that from, but it will serve you well. You can be
impatient, especially when someone doesn’t understand what you mean. We remind
you to “put the love in your voice,” and you do for a day or two. You are
famous for your hugs. If you love
someone, they will know it by your hug.
You say “I love you” to daddy and me thirty times a day. You still climb into our laps and want
to give kisses. You wake up happy
every day. My mom used to say that
my philosophy was “nothing is going to rain on my parade.” I see that in you. I told you that once, and you said your
philosophy was hakuna matata. Same thing. I hope you always have that spirit.
As I reflect back on the joy you
have brought me in your 5 years, I am incredibly grateful. You are a delight to your dad and me. I
look forward to what this next year will bring, but I love this moment in time
with you.
2 comments:
Hi Cindy, what a beautiful letter and every word is true. Thanks to you and Mike for sharing your beautiful precious daughter with us. We can't wait to see the joy she brings us all this next year.
As I am cleaning out my room, packing, organizing and preparing to graduate college, I found the card that you and Mike gave to me the last time I babysat Margaux. I proceeded to open it and reread it, finding this blog listed inside the card. I came straight to my computer to look it up, in hopes that you all still blogged about sweet Margaux. I was so anxious to see pictures of her and it was no surprise that when I pulled up the blog, I saw a beautiful 5 year old little girl! My, has she grown up! I read through some posts; she is such a cutie and still as beautiful and smart as I remember.
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