I was cruel and sold the train table he never ever used.* The thing was huge and took up the better part of his bedroom so it was a relief to get it out of our lives. The trains and track are still used regularly so it was just the table or I'd be able to get another big pile of stuff out of our lives. I put down a rug I'd kept stored under his bed and then dragged the huge kitchen we'd made up to his room.
Sam didn't notice the following:
- The big gaping hole in the living room where the kitchen had been even when he was using that same space to make a massive floor puzzle and later, to build things with Lincoln Logs.
- The lack of a train table.
- That same kitchen set up in his bedroom
Now I wonder if Ben would notice if I rearranged the furniture in the living room. Not that things would fit any other way.
*I sold it on Craig's list and this being Vermont, there are the usual odd connections. Sam's best buddy at his school is the son of the husband's boss. Not only that, the company they both work at is one of Ben's customers. And of course, the wife works at one of the agencies we fund at work.
1 comment:
The research studies on eye witness testimony are shocking! I didn't look at your link, but we reviewed Elizabeth Loftus' studies back in college, and they made me not trust eye witnesses on anything, including myself!
Sam may never notice the absence of the train table, since he didn't play with it. The biggest risk is that Ben may start asking him where it is, and then suddenly he will want it!
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