This project was way too easy for crapsmanship to interfere, but my heart is certainly tied up in its telling. The little guy in the shadowbox is Beany Bear. He’s as old as I am (OLD!), and he was my favorite stuffed animal during my youth. He’s not only dear to my heart, but he’s been a favorite with many of my former students. Beany Bear has been the subject of many, many writings I’ve done for students to teach them how to pick a topic, draft, revise, edit, and lots of other writing skills. I write about the time that I was six and getting ready for my first dance recital. My two-year-old sister Laurie was jealous, so she took my mother’s red lipstick and smeared it all over poor Beany Bear.
I’ve decided that Beany Bear really should be passed down to my sister’s daughter and her children, so I bought a shadowbox with the kind of backing that you can stick pins in. With pins in his ears, hips, and feet, Beany Bear is ready for Lacey, Leila, and Nola.
I love your box for Beany Bear! That brings back great memories! It makes me want to teach writing again!
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I know! There are certainly hundreds of kids who know Beany Bear. It hurts my heart a little to give him away, but he doesn’t do me much good sitting in my closet with my teaching materials.
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I hope that Lacey will know what an honor you are bestowing upon her and the girls to pass it on to them!!!
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🙂
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Please try to bring some of these stories this weekend, I would love to read them!
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I’ve got one stashed in the back of the shadowbox.
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