When I was a kid, June 1st brought with it giddy excitement. This was when I lived in Poland and the date was significant for those living in so called Communist countries. On this day we celebrated International Children's Day (you can read about its origins here). Small gifts, a few treats -- maybe an ice cream scoop between two wafer bars, and school celebrations.
I've never stopped thinking of it as a day that acknowledges the very special stage of life that is childhood. Personally, I think it's tough being a kid. I remember it as a period of great uncertainty. Where was I heading? What would I become? Who will I marry? Will I die before reaching adulthood? Will I ever have my own home, however small, maybe a studio, a place to escape to at the end of the day where no one will look over my shoulder and tell me what to do? The usual kid stuff. If you have a family, a safe home, adequate food, good health, a school where you actually learn something, then chances are you're not unhappy. And I wasn't unhappy (though I worried about what "being happy" was really like and if I in fact had risen to that level of life satisfaction, given that I was also so apprehensive about where I'd land as an adult, if I ever reached adulthood). But I had the feeling that I was just treading water, and that life would really began once I had my own home and maybe a child in it. Hmmm... waiting for childhood to be over so that I could then assume responsibility over another childhood? I tell you, being young is hard, contradictory and often nerve-racking.
And yet, there is that impishness, that playful defiance that seems to slip away as you grow to be a Responsible Person. These days I look back at childhood and I smile at all that seemed so normal then. Downing a candy bar (in New York) or a whipped cream concoction (in Warsaw) after school. Taking my skateboard out and pretending I was so cool with it (in New York). Watching endless TV shows when my parents went out (which, given my father's diplomatic career, was often). I may have worried about the future, but I never worried about investing time and energy into that future, preferring to find something to amuse myself with, sometimes, indeed oftentimes, to the detriment of my school work.
These days I have plenty of kids in my life and this is a good thing. They remind me of what it was like to be their age. I hope I can reassure them that finding happiness is a worthwhile pursuit, even beyond your childhood years. Too many of us can, but wont look for ways to lead a satisfying life. Reading about all the children that can't even imagine what a peaceful, healthy, food-filled day looks like only reminds you how precious are the days where these are not your worries, or the worries of your children or grandchildren.
I wish I could just say "Happy Children's Day" to all the kids of this world and make it be so...
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In other news -- it is a calm and very lovely morning here, at the farmette.



We eat breakfast on the porch and linger once again after we're done eating. I'd purchased cushions for our metal chairs and Ed is trying very hard to convince me that this was an unnecessary acquisition, but I've noticed that since I put them down, our breakfasts have doubled in the length of time we spend on them!

And then I finish the weeding of the sunny flower fields. Thoroughly! Ed's friend comes over to visit and as he pauses to watch me bend down to pull out the weeds, he asks if I ever suffer from back pain. (He's a chiropractor, so well he might know about back pain!). I don't know why I can do this for so many hours and come out unscathed, but so far, I've been spared!
And by afternoon I am done. The fields will never again be this weed-free -- certainly not this growing season and perhaps not ever. True, it is like cleaning a house: within a short period of time the house will be messy again. Guaranteed. But unlike in a house, where wiping a surface will not lessen the likelihood of a dirty one soon after, a removal of a weed lessens the magnitude of weed proliferation over the summer. You've removed seeds. You've weekend their root structure. You're investing in a lovelier landscape way beyond the period where you can say proudly -- "we are, at the moment, weed free!"
Of course, this is work only I can appreciate. Here, I'll take a photo of a field or two: you can't tell it's weed free! But I can!

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And still other news: I see that today's election in Poland cannot be called with certainty, though it does appear that the Warsaw mayor (you can view him as pro-EU, pro-democracy, anti-whatever it is that authoritarianism brings with it) may eek out a presidential victory. Which would be splendid. And here's what really is inspiring: 72.8% of Poles voted. (65.3% of eligible Americans voted in 2024.)
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In the evening the young family is here for dinner. It was warm enough for them to have gone swimming at their community pool today. Could it be that we are done with spring?
We eat on the porch. Of course.

This is what contentment looks like. For all of us.
with so much love...