May 7, 2011
One of my most vivid memories of being a child was Christmas eve when I was 6. My brother, whom I looked up to (because he was taller), was in a very excited mood. Santa would soon be here. He and I ran up and down the hallway much to my parents chagrin. We yelled, laughed, teased and played. I remember being absolutely exhausted. My favourite moment of that night was when Craig disappeared into the bathroom and returned moments later with his pyjama pants pulled low and his oversized pyjama top pulled lower to meet his bottoms. It made him look like he had short little legs and we all laughed. I of course, immediately copied him. Both of us running all over the house screaming “short legs, short legs, I’ve got short legs!”. My sides ached of laughter.
That night was one of my favourite memories of childhood. It didn’t cost anything and it wasn’t pre-planned. It just happened. There is a great saying that goes something like; “The best moments in life tend to happen when there are no camera’s around.” I am not sure who said that. Maybe it was my mom or dad, maybe it was Martin Luther King or Tony Robbins. It doesn’t matter who because it does hold some much truth.
I have been really hung up lately on the idea of creating memories and moments. The stuff you do at 16 will be the stuff you tell friends, family and kids about at 35. A picture can show the event but your words and description will give it a pulse. The amazing thing about your memories are they are yours. You have the creative license to tell the story. The mountain of snow you scaled at recess that was 30 feet high. The first kiss that was under the stars, near the water on a dock with a warm breeze soothing your sun drenched skin. The advise you got from a teacher that steered you in a direction you never expected. The random road trip that created small moments that become epic over time. There is no App, no video game or virtual experience that can be programmed for those morsels of childhood moments that become the feasts of the stories you will share with others.
Unplug today, if the sun is shining, take off your shoes and crunch your toes in the cool spring grass, run, laugh, play. Create new moments. Be aware and store them to your rolodex of life. Life is beautiful.
Posted by Stu Saunders in Leadership Family Life Learning and Growing on May 7, 2011 at 10:03 am | Permanent Link | Comments (5)
Comment posted on May 7, 2011 at 11:27 am by Angela (YLCC Member)
Great post Stu!
Comment posted on May 7, 2011 at 11:56 am by ORNJ (YLCC Member)
Bravo!! Nice to see you back in the vibe!!
Comment posted on May 7, 2011 at 4:33 pm by Ross Thomson (YLCC Guest)
That’s it. I’m getting off this damn computer and going outside. Right now. Thank you.
Comment posted on May 9, 2011 at 11:30 am by Erin Grittani (YLCC Member)
I’ve been longing to read a new blog from you- you’ve outdone yourself, Stu! Amazing, powerful and so very true!
Comment posted on May 9, 2011 at 5:22 pm by ElizabethB (YLCC Member)
i am predicting awesome memories tonight when i go belly dancing with my mom and her friends. so much laughter is anticipated.
great blog stu!