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Posted
Oct. 5, 2007

| Living
in a House of Dolls |
| My wife, Katie, got the chance to relive a little bit of
her childhood this week on the fifth birthday of our daughter,
Audrey. Being all-girl, Audrey is interested in dolls, playing
house, dress-up, princesses and anything pink or purple. For
her birthday, we dragged out of storage the dollhouse my wife
had played with during her own childhood, and presented it
as a gift. |
| But first, everything had to be just right. Katie dusted
the dollhouse inside and out, and then sat down with a big
box of all the stuff she had collected as a child to fill
the house up. |
| The house itself is gorgeous. Three stories, with a balcony
and a porch, a few windows and two doors on the front. The
back is open providing access to eight rooms and the stairs.
|
| It's amazing the details you can get for a dollhouse. Katie
put a credenza in the front hallway, and topped it with a
tiny flower vase and a telephone. In the living room, the
mother, father and two children sat in chairs and a sofa,
around a coffee table in front of a fireplace with photos
on the mantle. |
| Katie had planned to have a bunk bed for the two doll children,
but she wasn't able to find a bed that would work. But Audrey
dove right into playing and talked about it all day long.
|
| And if there was any doubt that the daughter at age 5 is
already like her mother, it ended in the car on the way to
school. After only playing with the dollhouse for half an
hour or so before having to leave for kindergarten, Audrey
turned to her mother and noted that the two doll children
had no bed in which to sleep. |
| The two of them worked out a compromise until a suitable
bed can be found. |
Copyright © 2003 The Herndon
Publishing Company
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