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< January, 2002 >
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When the Plffftts Finally Make You ProudAt home you suffer through the screeches and scraws of their practice sessions, even through closed doors. You rush through too many suppers to get your child to lessons, and sit patiently, napping or reading, in the car. Fast forward just seven short years. Now your child is playing with a university orchestra, concert or symphony band in an excellent school of music. The sound is pure pleasure: full and rich intricate music that delights and impresses. To your still-untrained ears, it might as well be the New York Philharmonic. You are proud parents, and not at all prejudiced. Translate this scenario to any activity your child takes up as a middle or elementary school child: dancing lessons, basketball, piano, soccer. If you are lucky, your child sticks with an activity and gets to the place where they not only receive pleasure performing, but give it as well. Of course there are many false starts along the way: you hoped they would develop into a stellar piano player, but they finally decide that basketball is much more fun, or they abandon music or sports all together and take up art. But the point is that with practice and lots of experience, something that started out as difficult and tedious to listen to, blossoms into the all-enveloping sound of a mature band or orchestra. Some of the guys in the university band were starting to bald. Some of the girls were developing (prematurely) middle-aged spread! I had to remind myself, these are young adults now. It's not my little girl up there, she's a young woman. It is wonderful to watch a child follow their dream and develop their gifts and talents, even if there are twists and turns along the way. In doing that, sometimes we as parents have to just stand back and get out of the way. So they didn't pick your favorite instrument to play: you learn appreciation of a new instrument. So they rejected your sport for another, or for art. You learn to value a new activity. If there is an ultimate goal for any marching band member, it might be to play in the Rose Bowl or Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. We were thrilled when our daughter got to play in the Macy's Parade this past November. Never did we think her first failed attempts at getting a note out of a flute would carry her down Broadway in New York City seven years later. Although she visited New York as a two-year-old, her first memory now of Times Square is marching into it as part of the show. But proud parents should always remain humble. No parent is proud of a child all the time. We have to let her and all our children try their wings and make mistakes, and keep praying for them through the process. Sometimes they make you hold your head up, searching over the crowd for a glimpse of them coming down Broadway. Sometimes they make you want to crawl in a hole and pull it in after you. No matter, we love them just the same, and just as we made mistakes, they have to make their share. It's called growing up.
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Contributed by Melodie Davis from her weekly columnANOTHER WAY (http://www.thirdway.com/aw/).For information on using Another Way in a local newspaper, contact:ANOTHER WAY, 1251 Virginia Ave., Harrisonburg, VA 22801-2497; or call1-800-999-3534; fax at 540-434-5556; or email me at:Melodie@mennomedia.org |
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