Three year-old No. Three loves motion. My walks with her through the neighborhood and around town are always spiked with Three’s discovery of new objects and her new uses for them. Three was the first to discover that bicycle racks in our town aren’t actually for bicycles, they’re one bar monkey bars, also known as monkey bar. When she was two, she noticed one day that she could see through to the other side of a bike rack. Five seconds later, she was holding onto it with two hands, swinging back and forth with her feet lifted off the ground. One of our fancier neighborhoods who seemed to have figured out this trick, robbed the world of the joy by placing decorative metal work across the opening. The first time Three found one of these, I realized that two year-olds are capable of looks of the purest, un-mollified disdain.
It should have been no surprise to me when a few weeks later, Three went from a vertical swing to a horizontal one. Arriving at the playground one afternoon, I found Three perched on a piece of equipment made for spinning. We call them—perhaps unoriginally—spinners. Typically kids stand on it, push themselves off a little bit, pull the leg they pushed with up, and spin for a bit. It’s a merry-go-round for one. As I walked over to the bench where my partner was seated, she said, “Watch this,” and nodded at Three.
Three took hold of the handle on top of the spinner with both feet squarely on the ground, not on the little circular platform most kids stand on to enjoy the spin. “That’s odd,” I thought.
Then, she started running in circles as fast as she could with the handle still in her hand. She was spinning up the platform. As she hit critical speed, she jumped up, and threw both feet away from the center of the spinner. With the resulting centripetal force, her body swung out making a horizontal line—from head to toe—parallel with the pavement below. She was virtually flying. At one point, she brought her other hand down to the standing platform making a sideways T with her arms and body.
Three continues to find new ways to move every day—much to my partner's chagrin, Three recently discovered she could pull a similar ‘spinner’ trick when buses in town go ‘round corners.)
Her exploration of motion is an innate quality of Three’s. She has no fear, and surrenders her body to whatever she’s decided to try next. Thanks to San Francisco’s primo weather, and her free unschooling schedule, she’s outside almost all the time. New opportunities abound at every step!
It should have been no surprise to me when a few weeks later, Three went from a vertical swing to a horizontal one. Arriving at the playground one afternoon, I found Three perched on a piece of equipment made for spinning. We call them—perhaps unoriginally—spinners. Typically kids stand on it, push themselves off a little bit, pull the leg they pushed with up, and spin for a bit. It’s a merry-go-round for one. As I walked over to the bench where my partner was seated, she said, “Watch this,” and nodded at Three.
Three took hold of the handle on top of the spinner with both feet squarely on the ground, not on the little circular platform most kids stand on to enjoy the spin. “That’s odd,” I thought.
Then, she started running in circles as fast as she could with the handle still in her hand. She was spinning up the platform. As she hit critical speed, she jumped up, and threw both feet away from the center of the spinner. With the resulting centripetal force, her body swung out making a horizontal line—from head to toe—parallel with the pavement below. She was virtually flying. At one point, she brought her other hand down to the standing platform making a sideways T with her arms and body.
Three continues to find new ways to move every day—much to my partner's chagrin, Three recently discovered she could pull a similar ‘spinner’ trick when buses in town go ‘round corners.)
Her exploration of motion is an innate quality of Three’s. She has no fear, and surrenders her body to whatever she’s decided to try next. Thanks to San Francisco’s primo weather, and her free unschooling schedule, she’s outside almost all the time. New opportunities abound at every step!
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