


Noah Hyatt. Baby. Welcome. ------------------- Lil Guy Jack Thomas - We love you.
Noah 2009 – The Imagination Blossoms
This was a magical year for Noah. Every week seemed a new adventure as he attempted to make sense of his world while creating his own imaginary creatures, scenes, and fantasies.
The year began with Curious George. His obsession was quite obvious. His eyes lit up every time we would turn to a page where Curious George was involved in some sort of accident with a medical cart, a library cart, or any sort of moving vehicle. His interest in accidents of this sort had him recreating these scenes. Sometimes he gathered a cart full of toys, mixed them all together, and created one random mess, only to crash the cart all over the living room floor. In preschool, he sought out the tricycle with the small trunk, filled it with random toys, and took off. Riding the tricycle was not the thrill however. Instead it was the slow motion fall to the ground, toys spilling out over the path, limbs spread out frozen still that gave him great joy.
We enjoyed having two extra guests in our household for a few months. Noah's imaginary friends, Pip and Pop, made every day a new adventure. Pip was apparently Noah's alter ego, carrying out his secret sinful desires. Pip threw Jack out windows, attacked grandmas, hopped aboard moving vehicles, and caused mayhem wherever he went.
The year ends with Noah's animal obsession. In the last few months of 2010 our house has been jam- packed with animals of all sorts. Zoos are created with blocks on a daily basis. Animal encyclopedias, and books on narwhals and whales are strewn about the rooms. Diego's animal adventures and Planet Earth are the videos of choice. He would go to the zoo every day if he had a choice. Our living room rug is an ocean, Jack's crib is a gorilla cage, the couch a snow-capped mountain. Noah himself is not Noah anymore. Every day he is a different animal, sometimes animals we've never heard of...a chinchilla monkey, a mountain camel, a killer whale. “I'm NOT Noah” he tells friends. His hands become flippers or claws causing some difficulty with carrying out the everyday tasks of life. At school, he refuses to wear his Noah nametag or have Noah written on his artwork. Instead, it must be the name of the creature of the day. At the store, he greets strangers with a bark or a growl. “I'm a killer whale” he shouts. The stranger's blank stare is perceived as fear as he quickly reassures them, “I don't eat people.” His curiosity is endless. His desires are adorable. And his imagination enhances the facts.
Pip is long gone. No more tricycle accidents. We're not sure how long a gorilla will roam our hallways. But these short-lived obsessions bring us back to the innocence and silliness of our own childhood play forcing us to reboot our own imaginations.