











|
Posted
June 29, 2007

| Jumping
Forward, With a Splash |
| There is a point in time when we become masters of our environment,
and we look to move up to another level, another challenge.
We master our jobs, our hobbies and we need to find that next
experience. |
| For my son, Charlie, that time came last weekend. After
months of struggling to avoid the water, our trip to the neighborhood
pool last weekend proved to be a break-through day for our
2-year-old. |
| Although he has participated in swimming classes with his
parents as a baby, for the past few months Charlie has loudly
protested bathtime and he's been perfectly content to play
with the water in the pool while standing or crouching safely
from dry land. |
| His sister, on the other hand, is so over the baby pool
at age 4 that she can hardly stand to splash around in it
for a few minutes while everybody gets settled. For her, the
big pool is where she needs to be. |
| A few minutes after Audrey and I head to the big pool Charlie
decides he just has to get in on the action and begs his mother
to take him. Despite months of avoiding the water, Charlie
is pleased as punch to bounce, splash, paddle and kick around
the big pool while his sister walks beside him, proudly touching
her feet to the bottom of the shallow end. |
| As Charlie begged us to pull him into the water, laughing
at the splash and happily going underwater once or twice,
he was perfectly comfortable in his new environment, ready
to try something new and to grow. |
| It was a wise person who said that one of the greatest things
we can do to keep our focus and keep learning is to bite off
more than we can chew, and then start chewing. |
Copyright © 2003 The Herndon
Publishing Company
Back to top
| Back to previous
page
|