Username + ID: Rosi + 981273
Name: Arden "Birdie"
Childhood memory (500 words OR one art pieces):
``Frolic while you can little one, for as you grow you will go blind to the magics of this world.`` her father's voice rang in her mind. Had there ever been magic in this world? Everything had been going so wrong lately, and it still felt like the whole world would crumble if she let out a hint of emotion. Why did everything always have to rely on her, why couldn't she go back to the simpler more magical times.
She laid down on her bed and drifted back to an almost forgotten memory. The fire place crackled and the smell of calm smoke and pine essence filled her senses. The walls around her were made of stacked wood, like lincon-logs, just life sized. There was a man, an old wrinkly joyous man, humming a familiar tune. He was rocking in a chair carving a tiny wooden bird. He looked like a tower from where she was sitting, playing on a soft rug with intricate wood carved animals. She was a child again, and her father was night next to her. She would have cried, but felt herself slipping back into the role of a seven year old.
"Daddy! Daddy, what are you making me now?" She asked him while the horses and the ponies tried to convince the squirrels to have a tea party with them.
"A little wooden birdie, child." Her father replied to her half interested curiosity.
"Why? I allready have so many little birds?" She paused her game, genuinely confused why he was making her a bird when she asked for a fuzzy rabbit.
"This one is special. It will help you see when you have lost sight of the way."
"Like you daddy?"
"Like me, birdie." he said, his sightless eyes staring out the foggy window.
It all faded back to her cozy, almost pitch black room, tears welling in her eyes. Arden reached for the very same comfort bird she allways kept on her bedside table, caved delacateley from soft smooth wood.
She held it close and finally let out the torrent of emotion she had been holding onto for too long, she missed that dumb, yet wise, old man. No matter how much she wanted to stay washed up in the tide of old memories, she knew that she had to let go and embrace the magic of now.
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