A travelogue of sorts for a place my daughter
invented. |
Idea by Camilla Baum, age 3.
There are many reasons a mountain can be blue. If it’s covered with blue flowers, for example. Or blue pine trees. Or sheets of ice reflecting the clear blue sky. Or if it’s made of a blue-colored stone. Or, of course, if it’s a magic mountain. According to one little girl, there’s a blue magic mountain not far from here. A day’s walk at best. More of a stroll, really. For an adult, it would be an easy stroll, since the day’s time assumes you are walking hand-in-hand with a child. Any age child would do, but it’s best if you take a three-year-old. Here’s why: As soon as you walk onto the mountain, you turn into a three-year-old. It lasts only as long as you are on the mountain. So why would you want to bring a three-year-old with you? Because he or she (she in this case) wouldn’t change. And she’d be able to help you remember what it was like to be a three-year-old. How to play. How to have fun. And how to stop thinking about all those adult things that make it hard to be a proper three-year-old. That’s all there is to this story. She hasn’t taken me there, yet, though she says she will soon. While she’s still three. And she doesn’t want me to say anything more about the mountain. She’s afraid too many people would know where it was. That too many adults would go there. It’d be okay if they went with their children, she explained, especially their three-year-old children. But she thinks they would go by themselves. And then when she and I went there’d be too many adults around. Too many three-year-old adults. She says adults wouldn’t enjoy it without a three-year-old. Because they wouldn’t know how to. Because they wouldn’t remember how to really be a three-year-old. She says, “They can’t. They’d need help.” So that’s it. Not much of a story, I know. But then I haven’t gone to the mountain, yet. Maybe I’ll write more after I do. Or maybe I won’t. But either way, I’ll probably wait until a certain little girl is no longer a three-year-old. |