I have a game I play with my children, where I play classical music and they pretend to be animals in a forest. (The furniture and walls are the trees.) One is a wolf and the other a rabbit. They react to one another based on the energy of the movement, sometimes peacefully wandering around the living room and sometimes tearing about in full pursuit. They're getting too big for that, these days, as they can't make those corners like they used to, but they've got great appreciation for instrumental music and how it moves them.
I have a game I play with my children, where I play classical music and they pretend to be animals in a forest. (The furniture and walls are the trees.) One is a wolf and the other a rabbit. They react to one another based on the energy of the movement, sometimes peacefully wandering around the living room and sometimes tearing about in full pursuit. They're getting too big for that, these days, as they can't make those corners like they used to, but they've got great appreciation for instrumental music and how it moves them.
ReplyDelete