The Allergy Experiment

This experiment started (for me) on or about the day I marched forth and married agreed to marry an animal-person. She always said

Fur and Feet!

The Animal Person
Unfortunately, for The Animal Person, this experiment never got any official funding because one party in Congress had an over-riding allergy to the fur plank in her platform.

Skim forward several years, add a couple more Mermaids, both showing Animal Person tendencies, and the story gathers complexity.
Neighborhood Bozo
We even tried a mechanical, robot-kitty that moved and purred when you pet him.
We got him when LaGrande was one.
He was good enough to fool a one year old for a day or two, and amazingly, he’s still around. I don’t remember his original name but now we call him BrokeNeck Kitty.
Really.

As things like this might do, this true-to-life experiment turns out to have recapitulated a certain…history.
You might ask,

What do you mean ‘…a certain history?’

Well, maybe a couple of histories together. Let me ‘splain.

History Number One
You see, as a little blief I had a neat book, a little learn-to-read-anthology, and I read it a lot.
One of my favorite stories in it was called Too Many Bozo’s.

Let’s review.
This was a story about a little boy who wanted a dog – but his Mom wouldn’t let him. Their house was too small, or something like that. Let’s say I’m kinda like that Mom – but probably not as nice, and with allergies.

So, the boy brought home a frog!
Bozo the Frog

Just like my Mermaids did.
Our first pet, wayyy back in OughtFour – was a frog, Hayla, who joined some gifted fish.
Between then and say 2012 there have been many other Bozo The Frog’s; grasshoppers, tree frogs (I had a GREAT time feeding them flies), ladybugs, praying mantis’ (briefly), and perhaps even some that an animal person might consider important but which I am blocking forgetting.
With EVERY SINGLE ONE – I probably had the very same look on my face as the mom in the story.

Recently we had an uptick in fish – this is Blood Red Beta and he joins two other fish whose names even The Animal Person doesn’t remember.
Bozo the Beta
They just float, in their isolation chambers, all day long, like Nirvana fish. ‘Cause they don’t have any feelings.

Anyway…

In the story, when the frog surprised the mom in the sink she insisted that he go and the boy reluctantly traded him for a rodent – specifically a rat!
Bozo The Rat

Now we haven’t brought a rat into this house, ever, (at least not on purpose) but we do have our share of rodents.
Back in ought-eight, The Animal Person (and her CountryMouse sister-in-law) agreed that Rabbit’s are wonderful pets and once again I capitulated with a look verrrrrah simalah to the one you see in the story.
Bozo The Rabbits
The Mermaids were over the moon, yada yada yada…
And AGirlBunny and Nishi have been in our yard (still not a problem with my allergies) mowing my lawn weeds, and digging chuckholes in the grass, ever since.

Then about a year ago – fur and feet, finally found it’s way into the house.
Bozo The Hamster
I wasn’t super happy about it but LaGrande and TheWeeOne were, once again, over the moon. So I’ve, uhhhh, tolerated it’s attacks on the water spigot and of course the endless midnight rampages on a grease-less wheel.
Bubbles lives in the living room.

In Too Many Bozo’s the rat got out and ate the mom’s cake and had to go – so the boy brought home an ant farm.
Bozo The Ants
This was the last straw for the mom, she couldn’t bear the thought of them also escaping and taking over (as insects invariably will).

Setting aside one season of grasshoppers, a rescue hermit crab named Miracle is our only Bozo Ant.
Bozo The Hermit Crab
Miracle’s swamp-mate, ShyBlue Hermy, didn’t make it as far as this story, may the tide rest her shell.

Miracle actually makes The Animal Person look like the mom in the story – kinda white and quivery.

Pretty creepy.

[tangent]
I can attest that hermit crabs aren’t much good as pets; unless you want a real fright in the middle of the night as they silently roam around their wetland and then suddenly fall from the top of the rock smacking their shell into the side of their glass like a crazed inmate, 10 yrs in solitary, creeping out of the dark as you walk by to throw his dirty tin cup at the back of your head.

Makes the hair stand up on the back of your neck.
[/tangent]

But all these years of animal wishes were wearing on me, and not in an altogether bad way.
I’m definitely not an Animal Person, and I certainly don’t like the interminable expenses on each new ‘fad’ – if that’s what they are – but I do enjoy the occasional romp and a laugh or the warmth on my lap through a movie provided by a good old friend of a pet.
That said, every Easter and Christmas spent in an animal house reminded me, in a few short hours, that my house was not to be an animal house.

Even the strongest of walls do crumble.
The strongest mortar in my brick-wall defense began to erode rather aggresively once I figured out my relationship with sugar. My most aggressive allergies were diminished to the level of the occasional gnat in your soup.

Then, a small hole was poked into the fissures left between those bricks when I spent an allergy free week in St. George with a puppy in the house. Credit Gramma Nana. (uhhhh What kind of dog is that?)

And here we are, finally.
We’ve come to the experiment.
The REAL experiment and the point of this post.

The Experiment
Last Christmas I found out that Gramma Nana and Grampa Troy were coming to town for a week and in an attempt to maximize our visitation time we offered insisted that they stay with us. Their dogs (now there are two) would clearly have to stay home – or would they?

Not unlike the mom in the story, I came to realize many years pets ago that the onslaught wouldn’t stop unless or until The Mermaids got their “real” pet.
I’d be lying if I didn’t tell you I’d spent some real time investigating hypo-allergenic cats.

But…MY GOD some of those things can be ugly.

And if they aren’t ugly they are expensive.
And even the expensive, semi-un-ugly ones are apparently freakishly psychotic or furniture shredding attention whores…or both.
And…most importantly, often they don’t make a whit of difference to the allergy prone.
No way I experiment with a hairless rat-cat-rat that is bred not to take no for an answer.

But now I had a chance.
I knew the puppies. Check.
I could find out if I could co-habitate with TWO scruffy little puppies, for a whole week, with the doors shut to the northwest weather, and wall-2-wall carpet and survive! Check.
I wouldn’t have to risk an arm and a leg, my future relationship, and putting the Mermaids through therapy in their mid teens when I tore their precious rat-cat from their tear-marked claws. Check.
All that AND we get Gramma and Grampa for a week! BONUS.

I figured: worst case scenario I get some medication rolling and tough out a week of puffy-face.
I’ll sleep in the basement and The Mermaids get a fix – what’s not to love?

Besides…maybe, just maybe…nahhh. Don’t get anyones hopes up.

To make a even longer story shorter – the week went swimmingly.
The puppies (both Havanese) were excellent, I didn’t see any gnats in my soup, and then it happened – despite my best efforts, the murmurs began about 2 days before they left.

I wish they could stay!
I wanna doggie puppy!
Someday when I’m older I’m gonna get my own puppy – cause Daddy’s allergic!

In the story the mom has a heart of gold and capitulates to her only child as long as the dog is small.
Bozo The Dog

About 2 days after our experimental puppies went home our new dog came home.
The REAL Bozo The Dog
Wikit was the last of a litter, a late December, shot-in-the-dark opportunity at having a dog of our own.
And in many ways he’s turned out to be a pretty fun little friend.

He’s already a bunch bigger than this as this post took a while to assemble.
This was taken on the first day after he came home when TheWeeOne was introduced to him.
I’m sure there will be many more photos & stories of Wikit to come – if not here than elsewhere.
The Mermaids? They are most definitely up to their eyeballs in puppy love.

History Number Two
Now earlier – I did say there were a couple of histories in play.
As a post-script to the Bozo-like turn of events that brought a puppy into my ‘non-animal house’, I have something of a Velveteen Rabbit moment.

A toy puppy, so loved, and so careworn, and perhaps eventually shoved to the back of a memory.
Yet so old and wise is he through those days of living and loving that in the end he comes…to…be.
I give you, Tiny RuRuff, LaGrande’s favorite toy puppy from her three’s, four’s, and five’s.

The REAL Tiny RuRuff

He’s real.

The Tarzan Experiment

My 19 month Tarzan experiment is officially over.
In case you are one of the few who HAVEN’T heard the story (and for posterity).

In August of 2012 I was sporting the clean look.
The Clean Look

TheWeeOne (age 5) and I were channel surfing and saw a mid 90’s TV show of Tarzan
ApeMan

She asked

Is that a girl?
No!
Why is his hair so long?
He’s Tarzan, he doesn’t have any scissors! (but apparently he does have a ray-zor and a waxing kit)

She paused for a few minutes and regarded this ape-man and then said

Hm, I like it…
(looking over at my bald head)
…you should do it.
OK!

I agreed and didn’t cut my hair one time; until yesterday.
It was interesting to note how it modified some of my self-perceptions.
Sometimes I felt scuzzy and sometimes I felt like I didn’t have a care in the world.
I didn’t analyze how I might have been treated differently but I’m sure there were lots of subtle differences.
A lady recently asked me on the street ‘You gotta cigarette?’.
It was certainly difficult to power through some of the bad-hair months between 6-10 and I’ve haven’t used THAT much shampoo in a decade.
I really don’t like the maintenance effort involved.
Pony-tails hurt your scalp and I woke myself up sometimes when I roll over on my hair in the night.
TheMommy REALLY didn’t like the look.
and
Right now? My head is cold.

Tarzan Experiment

Nez Perce and inter-tribal Tamkaliks celebration.

We took this trip to Wallowa (wa ‘la wa) in July because TheWeeOne wanted to meet an Nez Perce indian friend just like her American Girl doll named Kaya (whom she brought in complete pow-wow regalia).
Two little girls gone native.
I’m not sure she met with what she expected at this event;

I thought there’d just be lotsa teepees.

…but the weekend proved to be anything but lacking.
We did see, hear, and experience a fair amount of authenticity.
This image is taken from a short video presented on my Instagram account, where you can also listen.
Nez Perce and inter-tribal Tamkaliks celebration.

Authentic dancing
The costumes, singing, and dancing were definitely a high point and a focus of the weekend.

They clearly took their rituals VERY seriously.
Tradition

Impressive array

The grounds, where the majority of events took place, was well designed…
Tamkaliks grounds

…and the view out of the south entryway was amazing at sundown – especially so with the teepees on the river.
Teepees at Sundown

A horse parade happened one morning, recognizing several individuals who had followed a traditional path to the encampment from Pendleton, on horseback.
Horse Parade
Tribal Elder

TheWeeOne even got a very brief encounter with two of the performers her age.
Mermaids and NezPerce

And the rest of the weekend was spent either driving to and fro…
LaGrande - Thattaway.

…or walking on water, near the cabin we reserved, just outside of Joseph.
Who knew that Mermaids CAN walk on water.

It was a great little place called Trouthaven. The sunset on the hills even reflected gold in the water
Waterskiing on liquid gold.
(NO retouching here)

And we even saw some hard-to-find wildlife.
This guy took about 30 minutes to track down

TheMermaids, ever the chameleons, went a little native themselves in a very short time.
Girls gone native
Girls gone native II

Quiet Cloth

This past weekend we drove to North-Eastern Oregon to see the 23rd Annual Nez Perce Tamkaliks celebration.
It is a PowWow and friendship gathering filled with their rich oral tradition, stories, dancing, prayer, and the appropriate pomp and circumstance. I’ll get to more of that later.

First, a vignette from the ride home.

We drove a lot, 909 miles over 4 days, and near the end of the tired drive home The Mermaids were mostly good, their DVD player was malfunctioning (overuse?) and TheDaddy purt-near ran us out of gas between Yakima and Ellensburg when we stopped for dinner. The Mermaids were half asleep and somewhat delirious – bordering on cranky – a good time to stop.

The WeeOne was strangely holding out for Subway sandwiches until she tasted the pancakes and syrup which TheMommy had ordered with her meal. She ate roughly one-fifth of the short stack but the shot of sugar to her system was obvious – like three big swigs of whiskey on an empty stomach.

She started free-associating.

This carried over into the van, back on the read, where she was (mis)quoting lyrics from songs, beating her sister with a pillow-pet and just generally getting the jitters out.

Finally her sister had enough and after the n’th iteration of some lyric LaGrande loudly SHHHH’d her; WeeOne whispered her refrain this time.
We laughed and TheWeeOne got more ‘gas in her tank’.

Again the refrain
SHHH! (Laughing)
Again this time, but different.
(more Laughing)
SHHHHHHHHt!

The car fell momentarily silent – LaGrande held her mouth for a second and then said

Oopsie, (still laughing) I just said ‘SHHHHHHt’?!
It’s okay, it was an accident.
Okay.

But TheWeeOne was still going, hair on fire, and hearing this nominal acceptance she gave a testing whisper.

shhhhht.(giggles)
SHHHHHHHt. (this time louder)
Hey?!
SHHHHHH…………….t!
Hey now, that’s enough! I know it sounds funny but that’s still like saying a bad word.

Then, with TheMommy’s reprimand still hanging in the air, TheWeeOne paused; and queued her zinger.

SHHHHHHHHHHHHHHirt!

I don’t remember the next 2 miles of road, nor could I see it through my laughing tears; all four of us were delirious..

The Mommy and I agreed we are pretty much on defense from here on out.

HobieCat on a bikeE tandem.

Yesterday, on my commute home, I was kinda just poking along and turning onto the Seward Park hill I saw a very strange thing. It made me pause, and when I caught up to it (him) I paused some more, because he wasn’t going very fast.
It, rather he, turned out to be a BikeE tandem recumbent carrying what ended up to be the mast for a Hobie Cat.
A Hobie Cat (for everyone but BopOp and JC) looks sorta like this.
bravo-action-13-full

This is what it looks like on the back of a BikeE tandem.
HobieCat on a BikeE tandem.

Now this young fellow, let’s call him Hobie, was more than happy to provide me with a picture, he even asked if I wanted him to stop for the shot.
Nothing could have been further from my mind – him stopping that is. So I got the picture and was then nearly clipped by the back end of the mast as he rounded a parked car.

About then we were passed by an oldish gentleman, let’s call him Adolf. I would estimate Adolf to be 75 or better, riding a vintage steel lugged 10 speed, with wavy shoulder length white hair, and motoring up the hill at a 4+ minute pace, doing quite well.
As he passed, Adolf said,

It looks like you’re running guard position!?

That sounded like fun, and traffic was rather heavy, so I ran wingman for Hobie to the top of the hill – a 3 minute climb for me that we managed in about 6.

During this 6 minutes I found out a number of interesting things about Hobie and his quest.
Among them:

  • This was Hobie’s first time riding a recumbent (WOW!)
  • He only fell over once on the ride, at slow speed, in a deep dip in the road.
  • He finds the seat to be terribly uncomfortable.
  • His gearing was perfectly sufficient for climbing just about any hill (very low gearing on tandems).
  • But his stoker (the ~40lb mast) wasn’t helping out much.
  • He was bringing the mast to his Dad’s house.
  • He’s nearly at the end of his ride since his Dad lives only 5 blocks further on – at the top of the hill.

And where did you start?
..ake …ity …
Uhhhh, did you say Lake City?
…ep
WOW!

  • Once Hobie’s dropped off the mast he’s RUNNING back to Lake City (WOW WOW!)

Did you say you were running back?
…ep! (BIG grin)
I guess, that might be ok for you (looking at him full in the face) what are you…17?
…eah?!…lmos…ighteen

  • That’s right, Hobie is only 17.

That was the last question I got to ask Hobie before he pulled off the road to his Dad’s house.
I wished him well and then…I reflected.

I reflected, as I returned to my 20mph pace, that he looked like he was having fun.
He was certainly enjoying the unique challenge and that I myself might have done something similar if the NEED presented itself.

I also reflected that BopOp likes to tow things like bikes and lumber with his bicycle.
In fact I snapped that picture with lumber in mind.

Getting further down the road, I remembered that TheAmboyObserver brilliantly recognized that we could cart a half-rack of homebrew (each?) home for the holidays from the UW on our bikes when we were only marginally older than Hobie is now.

And further still, now seeing Adolf growing larger, my thoughts turned to Grumpy.
I confidently asserted to myself that, like the aforementioned family, Grumpy wouldn’t be might be found dead doing something crazy like this.

It was at about this thought that I neared Adolf, and I aligned myself to pass.

I won’t speculate on why I didn’t just say “on your left!” like I normally might – but perhaps we shared a bond? Instead, I said,

Ya know, maybe I should have asked that kid if he was German!

(and without any perceptible pause Adolf smartly replied)

HA! That did look like a German act!

and then reaching the edge of earshot I heard a prizewinning exclamation

ÜBER ALLES!

The Middle Middle

I wish I could have these conversations on demand – but they are not at my whim.

TheWeeOne and I had just finished reading a (ridiculously simple) little book whose punchline was “triple mint snow-cones”.
And I had some very hot dinner in my bowl.

These grits are hot man! Like the opposite of snow cones!
Water is the opposite of snow.
What? Wh…Really, why do you say that?
Because hot is the opposite of cold, and when you make snow hot it turns into water.[smile]

Let’s pause the conversation here for a minute and reflect back to a day in the not too distant past when I asserted to (or agreed with?) Monya that air was the opposite of water while in another breath confirming water to be the opposite of dirt.
I think, at the time, BopOp was confounded that we were able guess “the password” using such clues. Contextually, it still might make sense – but I definitely noted that I would have to tell BopOp about water’s other opposite, later.

Then I prodded:

What about steam?
Ok?
Well steam is really hot water right?
Yes.
So what is the opposite of steam?
Water.
[laughing] But you just got done saying that snow was the opposite of water?! [still chuckling]
No. I said water was the opposite of snow.
[laughing stopped]
oh.

Whoa. I hadn’t thought that the opposite relationship might not be considered commutatitive
I said something weak like ‘ok, jus checking’. I mean, you know, who am I to imply that I know the true nature of opposite-ness?

And I wasn’t the only one who had paused to reflect.
Wee suddenly asked;

What’s the opposite of middle?
[barglegsh] I…don’t…know. [at least not any more]

Ahead of me a step, Wee looked over at the computer and said with a lilt

I’ll look it up?

Sweeter words were not yet spoken. I’m not really sure how many times I’ve refused to answer a question and told TheMermaids to look something up. So, I enthusiastically assisted her spelling and she typed her query into The Oracle The Google.

Astonishingly that same question had been posed before, online, and then even answered. But to m y mind the answer was like a long-winded, throw-the-book-out-the-window-dead-poets-society-style fashion. [Yawp!]
I tried to sum it up for Wee.

Well this guy says that there is no opposite of middle, that it can’t have one.

She smiled-ish at me with a combination of we’d-discovered-something-together but with a somethings-still-bothering-me wrinkle in her brow. Lucky for me I think I’m learning a little bit about how to keep these balls rolling.

But don’t take this guys word for it! I mean he says ‘middle has no opposite’ but what do you think?
[and without even pausing]
How about outside?
[What the…?!!] You mean the opposite of middle is outside?
Yeah, like the middle of my body and the outside of my body.

Still trying to get it straight I made three points on the table with my hands, let’s refer to them as A, B, and C. In retrospect, I think I over-simplified her idea by making it ‘linear’ when her idea might be/have been more 3D, but I said,

So you mean that A is here and C is over there and B is in the middle and so then both A and C are the opposite of B?
Yeah. [another smile]
Hm…And all of this space between A and C is like what…just the inside?
Yep.
Ok – ya know, I can go for that…but what about this spot – halfway between B and C.
???
Isn’t that also a middle?
[the question marks resolved and a big smile came across her face and she said.] Whoaaa coool!

I wasn’t expecting that AT ALL, but it certainly made me happy.

Either she was seriously intrigued or something just popped or…ummmm…perhaps it was something in the middle. 🙂
However it is I was pretty revved up and really wanted to see where else we might find ourselves when she grinned a wide sheepish grin and asked,

Can I look up Strawberry Shortcake videos?

There was something like a big whooshing sound in my head, I was still elated about this little exchange, but I made myself capitulate because, again, you can’t force this stuff.

Or as Miracle Max said in The Princess Bride “You rush a miracle-man and you get rotten miracles.”

Yep. You can look up Strawberry Shortcake videos.

And I do have to remember that she is only six.

Six and three quarters!

Emliy Twet

Last weekend Wee was “helping” me fix things in the garage – but she got bored.
So she asked,

Can I draw something?
uhhhh, yeah!?

And in the cold of the garage she started, very quietly and deliberately.

After 20 minutes I was done with my task and told her I would move upstairs if she needed me – she followed a short time later with her pad and pencil in hand.
After 30 minutes she paused to ask about the black pencil lead all over her hand but during the entire hour she only paused to stare out the window for short periods of time while she considered…something.

I didn’t pay much attention, happy to have some “peace and quiet” doing my own thing.

Suddenly (to me) she announced she was done and asked me if I’d like to hear her story.
I’m lucky I had the wherewithal to start a recording and later I took pictures of her drawings.
She also defined the title of her story, on the fly, while telling me the story and, based on that, she drew the cover page at the end.

I’ve compiled the pieces, together here, in a video as narrated by the author and illustrator.

Art Conversation

Last night, I began my homeschooling night with TheWeeOne thinking it would be about drawing.
But she wasn’t interested – she wanted to play Bork Uncle or UpHigh.
While I drew the line there (BorkUncle is not schooling) I insisted that we didn’t have to be “boring” (her word).
She downshifted into

Let’s watch a moomie?!

and I countered with

Only if it’s instructional.

Some negotiations ensued and I drew the line at “learning about Vampires.” while she amazingly drew the line at “Creating clothes for her Vampire dolls.”
We wouldn’t budge.

I tried very hard to keep us in the realm of drawing…but I should have recognized her subtle shifts into moomies when 30 minutes later we had co-steered ourselves into watching Flamenco Dancing and Charlie Chaplin YouTube videos. Argh.

I did manage to right the ship (after I recognized she needed dinner) by asking a no-right-answer question.

What does The Scream, Flamenco Dancing, and that silent film all have in common?

After we discussed what “in common” meant – sheesh it is hard on a teacher when the pupil doesn’t have the necessary language eh?
We worked through that one and came back to the real question and with some prodding she agreed they were all Art.

Big breakthrough.

The rapid-fire discussion which followed delineated examples clearly NOT art…mountain climbing, baseball, food, money, etc.
What struck me, and the point of this post, is just how easily she zeroed in on what exists in the world which qualifies as ART – even without word-language…

What is ’emotion’?

And her resolutions lined up pretty well with what I would consider some fairly common assertions about art – at 6.
There is a very long conversation buried in this “discovery”, that even a 6 year old can discern very well what “Art” is, and further – even if the lines an individual 6 year old draws between subjects differ from other individual 6 year olds – at 6 she appears to be VERY reliable, consistent, and discerning.

There is an entire wing of Philosophy devoted to the subject (Aesthetics) and somehow at six one finds themselves knowledgeable enough to be on the front of that discussion? I think Ethics, Epistemology (maybe), and things like Physics and Mathematics would be hard pressed to say the same thing about their esoteric corners of conversation.

I took this while she ate some dinner and she winced…
Art Conversation 1
probably NOT art.

But once she had learned how to do this to it…
Art Conversation 2
yep – IS art.

If you have a young one in your immediate vicinity – give yourself an hour – allow the conversation to range far and wide and probe their understanding of art…I’d love to hear what you hear.
And besides that, it is fun.

It was icy

How icy was it!?!

It was soooo icy that…

…I started to think gutters were made for icicles.
everybody had them

…it was growing on trees.
I wonder  what the flowers would look like?

…it was stringing up lights.
maybe I can hire the ice next year?

…it was conducting electricity!!
uhhhh, something is wrong here

…it was spreading, like mold, and, and…and it was evolving…
it's ALIVE!!!

…and conducting nuclear experiments!!
bszzzszzzt

and the final step before I made it all melt…

…it was starting to brainwash my Mermaids!!
somebody do something!! they're coming to get me!!!

Staycation Part III – The New Benders

Towards the end of my staycation, we fished around for some new ideas, made some future plans for a sleepover with friends, and began to clean the house in anticipation of a coming garage sale.

[tangent]
Now, several weeks later, the garage is clogged with all of that garage sale stuff – not the best promoters.
But I digress.
[/tangent]

One particular early evening The Mermaids and I sat down to a movie and I rebuffed the usual suspects; My Little Princess-Pony-Carebear-Mermaid-Barbie just wasn’t on my menu tonight – so I put my foot down and said (with that over-super-ultra-mega-mondo excitement meant to drum up support that is frankly…aaaaa bit transparent to The Mermaids. Or to any kid really; in this day and age of carefully architected marketing savvy? I must sound like I’ve only got one bar on my cellphone.

So I said, all ultra-mega like,

I know! Let’s watch The Last Airbenderrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr!
Nooooooo – Daddy!?! We wanna watch My-Little-Princess-Pony-CareBear-Mermaid-Barbie!!

Sigh.
A little weaker this time.

Nope – Daddy is vetoing that one. Let’s watch The Last Airbender. It’s supposed to be good! 🙂

How the heck should I know?

But Daaaadddddyyyyy?!?!?!?……….does it have a girl in it?
No.

But am I hearing a spark of possibility in that question?!

Then I don’t wanna watch it!
ME NEITHER!

Drat! Guess I’m gonna have to go 1950’s on ’em.

Fine. Then I’ll watch it myself and you two can go do something else.

…and I hit play, on my little remote, with such…authority! I’m so 1950’s.

Only five minutes later I had two very engaged Mermaids on my lap, eyes wide, mouths open. In a phrase – they loved it.

You see, it’s a story about a young boy who can control the primary elements of Air, Water, Earth, and Fire. And he, and his children group of power-specialists, can “bend” those elements to their will. A mix of martial arts, fantasy, naturally a love story, and a healthy dose of kid power led to The Mermaids doing their usual – acting out their favorite scenes, picking out clothes that resemble the characters and reliving the movie.

Then one of them asked,

How do they do that?

I attempted a movie making explanation and since it was still light out I went the ostensive route and said

C’mon, let’s go outside and make a quick movie. Just a test.

With action movie eagerness, we spent about 15 minutes setting up and shooting the various scenes in our backyard, one take only, and then repaired to my Macintosh to cut it together quickly – maybe 20 minutes. It was understandably choppy and lame and actually, quite perfect.

They liked it so much, they must’ve watched all 45 seconds about ten times, huge grins and all. So I proposed,

Tomorrow, let’s do it full on – right.

So we did, The Mermaids picked their costumes, we manufactured some “weapons”, and over breakfast we spent a good deal of time (and I burned through some Mermaid patience) writing a scene storyboard. With all that, and more, in hand, we moved the operation to a small wooded section of our neighborhood and what you see below is the result – a crowning achievement to an excellent staycation.

All in all, there is probably 20 min of footage, which took about 2 hours to shoot, and 15-20 hours to edit into the three and a half minute movie you see here. This video also includes about 3.5 minutes of credits and outtakes for a total of nearly seven minutes.

Needless to say – I wasn’t ready with the final product until the aforementioned “future” sleepover several days later. 🙂

ON WITH THE SHOW!
Enjoy – The New Benders!