Brave
Have you seen the movie Brave?
Last summer we took Kidzilla to see her first in-theater movie and that was the one. I am not a huge Disney Princess fan, but this one worked for me. This princess, Merida, is reluctant at best. She wants no part of her mother’s arranged marriage plan; when the competition to win her hand gets underway, Merida comes up with a clever scheme to compete for her own hand. I like this girl.
One of my favorite scenes in this film is this one below, where Merida snags a day off from her mother’s grueling princess preparations and heads out for the day with only the companionship of her beloved steed, Angus, and her trusty bow and arrow. The song is fantastic.
When we first saw Brave, I cried like a baby through this scene. Why? This girl reminds me so much of Kidzilla… I can’t explain it, really. All sorts of things make me teary since she came along.
Zilla is a wildfire, a free spirit of sorts, just like Merida. She loves to buck the system (any system) and arguing with her Mother is one of her very favorite things to do. Zilla was already giving me a hard time from the day she was born. The ob-gyn wanted to induce, but Zilla wanted no part of it. She managed to dig her heels in and hold out until they went in after her.
She’s a tough little thing, too – in many ways. When she was just a baby, her spirit was already evident; my Sister thought we should get her a shirt with a line from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream – “And though she be but little, she is fierce.”
Zilla had tubes put in both her ears at nine months old thanks to something like eleven ear infections over the course of a fall and winter. (I know…ridiculous. Poor kid.) We managed to score two chest x-rays in there somewhere as well for awful cold and flu-related nonsense. Her bout with the flu was terrifying. I have never known fear quite so real as the day the pediatrician stood in the exam room and said with a deadly serious expression, “I want you to take her for a chest x-ray.”
“Uh…OK…when?”
“Right now. They’re waiting for you. Go.”
She didn’t have pneumonia (either time) but Zilla has since learned to deal with mild asthma like a pro. Does she love using a nebulizer when she has a bad day or a rotten cold? Of course not. But she understands why she needs it and does what she has to do.
Like both of her parents, Zilla has been gifted with ADD/ADHD and all its wonderful idiosyncrasies. She’s a smart little girl and really does work to use the things we teach her about who she is and how her brain works. She is receptive to learning how to not only manage, but thrive with ADHD. She’s pretty darn comfortable in her own skin and isn’t afraid to be exactly who she is. Good for her.
Zilla isn’t afraid to try new things and meet new people. She plays at being shy for about five minutes in a new setting, but quickly adapts and throws herself into the experience wholeheartedly. This summer, she moved from her long-time daycare/preschool program to some new experiences at the school where she will attend Kindergarten in the fall. She spent a week at Vacation Bible School and two weeks in summer enrichment classes with other new Kindergarteners. She loved it all! She made new friends and is completely excited about starting school in September.
The summer wasn’t without a bump in the road, though. At the end of Vacation Bible School week, the kids were invited up front at Sunday Mass to sing their theme song together. We prepped Zilla for it all week, explaining what they would do and how it would work. When the time came, she headed up front with the rest of the kids, situated herself smack in the middle of the big kids (she was by far the smallest one up there that morning), and waved to us from across the room. The music began and Fab Hub and I held our breath… Would she sing? Would she do the hand motions? Nope. Because not ten seconds into the song, a much larger boy next to her did his motions with so much gusto that he elbowed her right in the face. Zilla cried the whole time she was up there. So did I.
When the song was over, she made her way back to us and flung her little tear-streaked face in my arms. I told her how sorry I was that she got slugged and her Fab Dad was none too happy with the Big Bad Boy who hurt his Zilla. She said she did not have a good time up there and was crying “Mom,” but I didn’t come. I honestly thought she was singing through her tears and I told her so. We explained that sometimes life is going to slug you in the face; you gotta just keep singing and doing your hand motions and tough it out. In the end, she got over it much better than I probably ever will.
Zilla is also not afraid to love with all her heart. If that little girl loves you, she loves you emphatically and you know it. She loves her Rotten Cats and is so happy to be with them, pet them, have them come in her room when we read at night. Yesterday at their annual vet visit, Zilla got to see three very new little kittens at the vet’s office after our Rotten Cats were finished. She fell instantly in love with them and she fell hard. At dinner that night she was still negotiating terms to bring those little kitties home to be buddies with the three Rotten Cats. (I’m sure they are totally excited about that idea.) We explained to her that even though we might have room in our hearts for three more kitties, there just isn’t room enough in our house. She actually cried – real tears – and said something about having two hearts.
“What would you do if you had two hearts, Zilla?”
I fully expected to hear a final desperate plea for those three kittens to come home since two hearts would mean twice as much love or something like that. But she surprised me once again.
“I would pump two rows of blood.”
She cracks me up.
Our Zilla is funny. And sweet and loving. She is strong and she is brave.
I want to be just like her when I grow up.
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Your daughter sounds wonderful and is obviously adored. That story about her getting hit and crying through the recital was so sad. I would have been so frustrated if I were you.
It was awful. But the worst part is that she told me she was calling “Mom, Mom!” and I didn’t come get her. I had no idea – I thought she was singing. How could I possibly know from so far away? She looked right at me and said “How could you not know when my mouth was doing this…” and she mouthed the word Mom several times. I wanted to go get her – calling for me or not – but the Fab Hub made me stay put. Let her work it out, he said. If she wants to leave, she will. Ugh. Longest five minutes of my life.
Kidzilla and Emma would love each other. I’m talking LOVE. I think we have some common personality traits ourselves!
Beautiful post!
Thanks, Essie. 🙂 I think we may just have a similar sense of humor, too. I often laugh out loud at the same things you pin on Pinterest. 🙂
I love how much you admire your daughter. It will be fun when she’s older to reminisce about some of her own brave moments. I’m sure that knowing you were behind her will run high in what she remembers about the events.
Here’s hoping!
She sounds like so much fun! And, without a doubt, brave, especially after continuing to stand on the stage after being clocked in the face.
(My daughter is always trying to talk us into a kitten, claiming the other two cats would LOVE it. Mhm, no.)
I hope kindergarten is awesome for her!
She is the greatest fun! And that was the same persuasive tactic we got last night – “But the three big cats will LOVE the three new kitties. They can each have a baby cat and they will love them.” Husband said more like love batting them around…ha. Sweet as our three cat boys may be, I’m pretty sure they do NOT want three little kitties running around. And I’m pretty sure I do NOT want six cats. Period.
What? You don’t want 6 kittehs using a litter box? Yakking up fur balls? Rubbing their greasy little faces against the doorways? Dropping pieces of kibble all over the kitchen floor? Can’t imagine why not….
I can’t tell you how easily I could have been convinced…but I had to hold my ground. Someone had to be sane.
My husband told us one time if we got another cat, then someone had to go. We told him we’d miss him….
The soaring music, the majestic surroundings, the unadulterated happiness – it’s why you cried through that scene. It’s Disney magic.
The story about the VBS slugging really hit home for me. Several times my children called for me and I didn’t hear them, and I got bawled out later when they explained how much they were hurt. So much guilt; even though they get over it, I can’t forgive myself. Why can’t be everything to our kids all the time?
That is the million dollar question. I suppose the answer is something like if we were everything for them at every moment, they’d never learn to develop their own sense of self. Or something.
She sounds so much fun; I’m glad she brings so much joy to your life. I think that if I had a kid, I’d want her to be just like the girl from Brave. I think that’s a good role model for little girls. While I didn’t like the plot of the movie that much, I thought the main character was great.
Yeah, the story definitely gives the mother/daughter dynamic a bad rap for sure. She loves the movie, so we make sure to focus on the more positive aspects of the story. She gives me a hard enough time without trying to turn me into a bear!
[…] My Daughter is usually responsible for things that surprise me. I am surprised by her intelligence, her humor, the speed at which she is maturing, the size of her attitude, and how completely much I enjoy and adore her…all of it. At Christmastime, the Fab Hub actually surprised me with a very sweet gift. It was partly the gift itself because it only took him nine thousand times to get the hints. But it was mostly the sentiment and explanation behind the gift that completely floored me. […]