Perfectionism Isn't So Perfect
I love how Persistence does not let perfectionism get in her way. Here is a note (including translation) she wrote to her Grandparents after seeing a photo of their (pretend)house in Alaska. (I don't have the heart to tell the kids their Grandparents don't really live in an Igloo!)
I mts uo iehop uo kum bak sum dae i so eor haws i btn
I miss you. I hope you come back some day. I saw your house. I've been
wudren wut u slep on it luks prite
wondering what you sleep on. It looks pretty.

Does she worry that her words are spelled correctly or that anyone can in fact read what she has written? No. Never. The point is to write it down and be done with it. When she makes a picture, she draws it, she colors it, she’s done and it’s beautiful.
When Victor makes a picture it takes him 12 new pieces of paper to get the drawing the way he wants it. Then he spends the next hour testing combinations, contemplating, gathering suggestions and deciding what colors to use. By that time we are on to the next activity so his project never gets finished. Either that or he actually does finish it but it’s the most hideous thing he has ever seen, it’s not good enough and he wishes he had never been born. The humiliation of being a failure is just so great.
When Victor taught himself to write he asked me how to spell each and every word he ever wrote. I longed for a version of beginning writing like Persistence produces but he wouldn’t think of it. One day I was determined to get some unintelligable writing samples out of him so I actually refused to tell him how to spell the words he was asking for. Yes, I am that mean. I told him to sound the words out and write them how he thought they would be spelled. He was so offended by my behavior that he snuck some books into the other room to find the correct spellings himself. See! The Winner always wins!






Kate in her jumper at 21 months. 




