SWASHBUCKLING SAM! #BLOGCHATTERA2ZCHALLENGE

 

There is this little guy who has a strong hold on all our hearts, and stays there – our very own swashbuckling Sam. He is all of five going on six and a curious blend of ‘the life and soul of the party’ and ‘a bull in a china shop’, but he does make his presence felt.


                                                                                                      Vecteezy

The other day we were all having a conversation in the car when he responded to something I said with “I am sarcastic!” I was flabbergasted that he even knew the word. When I asked him the meaning, he stumped me further by replying – “It means to say something and mean something else.”

That’s Sam for you. We take him swimming with Zo and for the entire forty-five minutes he is in the water, a smile lingers on his face. You can see it even when he is under water, much akin to the Cheshire cat’s grin.

When he is not in water, he is jumping off couches, clambering up monkey ladders and grappling his way across heights. He falls on his knees, makes a bit of a fuss, and then propels himself off to his next adventure.

Zo and he enjoy a love-hate relationship, laughing at one point, and in tears in the next. However, P and V have made it clear that they must stand up for and protect each other. In fact, for Raksha Bandhan, P makes them tie ‘rakhis’ on each other. “Why should only brothers protect sisters? Why can’t it also be the other way round?” is her pertinent question. After all, gone are those days when women were looked upon as delicate creepers, only able to grow under the protection of strong trees. Now they are the protectors, and often vociferous ones as well.


                                                                                                     Bigstock

One should watch Sam, the charmer, at work. Affectionate to the core, he believes in doling out hugs and kisses galore. I remember when P, V and the kids had come down to Thrissur for a holiday, Sam’s first ever trip to India in five years. P had trained them both for the moment when they met their great-grandmothers as also the countless relatives who were lining up to meet them.

As we walked into our apartment building, our security lady was sitting there. When she smiled, Sam promptly went to her and gave her a huge hug even though he had no idea who she was. She was overcome, and hugged him back, and it was a sweet moment.

Zo is a little more reticent, but she too has hugs to share. Sam follows her lead to the point where he then takes over, growing more boisterous every moment. He has the most pointed little chin which he digs into your collar bone when he feels extra affectionate.

We are a hugger family. Zo and Sam have imbibed those genes with a bit of nudging from P, who is herself not much of a hugger, but knows the significance of those genes. Of course, it was tough during Covid times, when one could not even be around people, let alone hug anyone.

Sam’s greatest joy in life is snacking. The snack cupboard at home overflows and Sam makes inroads into it with amazing dexterity. Chips, cookies, candies, chocolates, spicy stuff – everything goes. When the junk snacking goes overboard, P points both her offspring towards fruits – bananas, apples, grapes and oranges.


                                                                                               Dreamstime.com

Last week, Sam developed a tummy ache. Was it after all the bouncing he did at Bounce, or was it just a case of indigestion? We were at sea and P decided to put him on a no-junk food diet for a few days. These were tough days for our little man. His bottom lip hit the floor and for a change, his smile disappeared, only to reappear when the extra hot Dorito chips made an appearance.

Even as a two-year-old, Sam loved doing homework along with Zo. When she was busy with English and Math, he would sit along and copy words in a diary. He could spend hours doing so. Zo was also good with him, and she still is, helping him to learn new words and asking him questions to widen his knowledge base and his vocabulary.

The love of music runs in both families, and V and P play a lot of music for the children. They have the knack of recognising songs from the first note onwards. Nowadays they love listening to Queen, which is so mind-boggling, given their ages. Till recently, their favourite song was ‘Hotel California’. Ed Sheeran is another favourite. In fact, there are so many songs in their playlist that I have no idea of, and it makes me feel music-ignorant at times. Yesterday, ‘Dancing Queen’ came on and Sam remarked seriously to me, “Mooma, you’re the Dancing Queen!” which left me and everyone else in splits.

The other day as we were driving along, Zo turned to me and said, “Mooma, here are your favourite songs!” She went on to play ‘Abhi Na Jao Chod Kar’ and ‘Lag Ja Gale’, much to my astonishment.

How many moments do we treasure deep within our minds? How many hugs do we savour? Those seconds when we are walking in the malls, and I have these little hands in my grasp, even when they are sweaty. The times when they want to sit on my lap in the car, and in my heart for ever! When they spontaneously go and hug Nana who is also immensely proud of them, especially when Zo sprints with those long legs of hers or does the backstroke in the pool. Or when Sam dribbles his basketball perfectly, sometimes even a hundred times.

                                                                                                       Z's Sprint



                                                                                                     Freebiehive

                                                                                            Sam's Artwork

                                                                                      Nana, Dada and Zoya


           Mama, Samir and Mooma


               Mooma Making Egg Curry

Luckily, the heart is an ever-expanding muscle and has enough space to hold all the love in the world. We store these moments over sixty days, like camels store food and water, for we know that for the next ten months, these memories are all that we have to hang on to.

Z's Masterpiece


I am participating in the #BlogchatterA2ZChallenge2025.

https://deepties.blogspot.com/2025/04/swashbuckling-sam-blogchattera2zchallen.html

Comments

  1. Sam sounds like an absolute firecracker with a heart of gold! That “I am sarcastic!” moment had me grinning—kids really do say the most unexpectedly brilliant things. "Luckily, the heart is an ever-expanding muscle and has enough space to hold all the love in the world."
    — such a beautifully tender way to wrap it all up.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I love all your blogs full of energy and spice.

    ReplyDelete

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