Sunday, January 28, 2007

If I say, they will play . . .

The other day, Sam, my 3-year old grandson, was visiting us. He was in the game room with Andy (my 16-year old son), and I heard him talking to himself as he walked from the game room into the living room where I was sitting with Lindsay (my daughter/his mom), saying "I can't wait to show this to my GiGi (his nickname for me)!" He was carrying the new Monopoly game we had received for Christmas, still wrapped in cellophane, and asked "Can we play this?" I told him that it was a "big people" game and that we couldn't play right now. He said nothing, turned and headed back toward the game room. He said, again to himself, "I can 't wait to show this to Andy!" I chuckled to myself but made no comment to Lindsay.

In a few minutes, he came walking back from the game room, again speaking to himself, "I can't wait to show this to my mom!" He walked up to Lindsay, asked if we could play the game, and received the same response as from me and I'm certain the same as he received from Andy. He was determined to find a willing partner to play this game, and he was having no luck at all.

Of course, the funniest part of all was that each of the three times, he said the same thing in EXACTLY the same inflection, as if saying would make it so. It almost sounded like he was rehearsing his lines. He had to go home shortly after that, but next time he comes over, maybe we'll break out Monopoly and learn about counting money . . .

4 comments:

hampton said...

monopoly is the longest game ever!! if you try to show him how to play it once, i doubt he'll ever ask again!

Julie Kibler said...

He was the little engine that could. :) Funny funny!

Gail (but you can call me G) said...

I wasn't really planning to show him how to play, I thought I'd just let him count the money. Hee hee.

Yep, he was quite determined. To me the most hilarious part was the talking to himself in the EXACT same phrasing and tone of voice each time.

Sunshine said...

Well, you know what they say about positive thinking. So maybe he thought positive speaking would work too! ;)