We've got a kindergartner in the house! Bella actually started kindergarten a few weeks ago and so far she seems to really be enjoying herself. Perhaps a bit too much, and we're ironing out a few kinks behavior-wise, but she seems to be learning a lot and, most importantly, seems happy. I'm going to start volunteering each week in her class soon (as soon as my background check is approved), which I'm really looking forward to!
It's been a little emotional for me to have her start kindergarten. First of all, it doesn't even seem like it's possible that she's old enough to start school. And secondly, I really miss her during the day. And I know that this just means we're one step closer to having to let her go completely into the world on her own. And that scares this admittedly over-protective mama just a little bit...
My big girl all ready to go!
My mom found this poem and sent it to me a few days before Bella started school and it definitely had me in tears...
I Trust You'll Treat Her Well
World, I bequeath to you today one
little girl in a crispy dress.. with two blue eyes...and a happy laugh that
ripples all day long, and a batch of light blonde hair that bounces in the
sunlight when she runs. I Trust You'll Treat Her Well.
She's slipping out of the backyard
of my heart this morning and skipping off down the street to her first day at
school.
And never again will she be
completely mine...
Prim and proud, she'll wave a
young and independent hand this morning, and say goodbye and walk with
little-lady steps to the nearby schoolhouse...
Gone will be the chattering little
hoyden who lived only for play, and gone will be the delightful little gamin who
roamed the yard like a proud princess with nary a care in her little
world.
Now, she will learn to stand in
lines...and wait by the alphabet for her name to be
called...
She will learn to tune her
little-girl ears for the sound of school bells, and for
deadlines...
She will learn to giggle and
gossip... and to look at the ceiling in a disinterested way when the little boy
across the aisle sticks out his tongue.
Now she will learn to be
jealous...and now she will learn how it is to feel hurt inside...and now she
will learn how not to cry. No longer will she have time to sit on the front
porch steps on a summer day and watch while an ant scurries across a crack in
the sidewalk...
Or will she have time to pop out
of bed with the dawn to kiss lilac blossoms in the morning dew. Now she will
worry about important things...like grades...and what dresses to wear...and
whose best friend is whose. Now she will worry about the little boy who pulls
her hair at recess time... and staying after school...and which little girls
like which little boys...And the magic of books and knowledge will soon take the
place of the magic of her blocks and dolls.
And she'll find her new heroes.
For five full years I've been her sage and Santa Claus...her pal and
playmate...her parent and friend. Now, alas, she'll learn to share her worship
and adoration with her teachers (which is only right).
No longer will her parents be the
smartest, and greatest in the world. Today, when the first school bell rings,
she'll learn how it is to be a member of the group...with all its privileges,
and, of course, its disadvantages, too.
She'll learn in time that proper
young ladies don't laugh out loud...or keep frogs in pickle jars in
bedrooms...or watch ants scurry across the cracks in a summer
sidewalk...
Today, she'll begin to learn for
the first time that all who smile at her are not her friends. That "the group"
can be a demanding mistress... and I'll stand on the porch and watch her start
out on the long, long journey to becoming a woman.
So WORLD, I BEQUEATH TO YOU TODAY ONE LITTLE GIRL in a crispy dress, with two blue eyes, a happy laugh that ripples all day long, and a batch of light blonde hair that bounces in the sunlight when she runs.
So WORLD, I BEQUEATH TO YOU TODAY ONE LITTLE GIRL in a crispy dress, with two blue eyes, a happy laugh that ripples all day long, and a batch of light blonde hair that bounces in the sunlight when she runs.
I TRUST YOU'LL TREAT HER
WELL.
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