Oh my very favorite ages are between 2 and 6. You can have the most interesting conversations with them, ala Linkletter. Lots of times I get us a snack sit at the kitchen table, and then just let them talk. Hilarious! This was one of my very favorite conversations with my then 6 year old granddaughter, Little Diane, shortly after we were granted full custody of her and her brother Jamie.
They had very little, if any, spiritual guidance, so when Little Diane came into the kitchen one day and asked me if I knew Noah, I was all ears. I poured us each a glass of Kool-aid, sat down across from her at the table, and settled in for the story.
"Okay, Gramma. A long long time ago before there were cars, there was a man named Noah and he lived in Illinois." Okay, this is already getting good! "Him and his family was really good, and they were nice to everybody, even mean people." I nodded and waited for her to go on. No point correcting here, let the story flow.....
"There was a lot of mean people. They were bad, really REALLY bad. They was LY-in', and STEAL-in', and CHEAT-in', and they did lots of other bad stuff."
I nodded again, smiling inside as her big, green eyes grew wider with every breath. She was so earnest, and was so into her story it was just heartwarming. "What happened, Bumbley?" I reached for my Kool-aid and started to take a big drink just as she told me,
"One day God looked down and said, (here her forehead crinkled up and she made her voice sound as deep and God-like as she could make it) 'Well, that's enough of THIS crap.....'"
Do you know how long it takes to get cherry Koolaid out of white curtains?
Oh Blooie, I have learned a valuable lesson today reading your story..... Note to self: ALWAYS GO TO THE RESTROOM BEFORE READING BLOOIE'S STORIES! That was so funny. I am the only woman at my place of work working with 18 men. I laughed so hard one of them actually came in to make sure I was okay, he left laughing just as hard. You need to put a warning at the start of your stories that's going to cause us to "spew" from either end.