There are only seven remedies in The Secret Remedy Book, because it's a story, and a story has to have its own boundaries. One glass slipper. Two paths in the woods. Three wishes. Four hungry children. The Famous Five. Six swans. Seven remedies.
But I added one more remedy to the scrapbook because the scrapbook is a prop for me to use with children in connection with The Secret Remedy Book, and I did not want children to think that there are only seven remedies in all the world.
One more remedy: "Tie bells on your clothes." And then the extra caveat: "You must do one little dance to celebrate the wearing of the bells."
We had the sweetest little cat by the name of Missy (short for Mystery). She was Boo's little sister. We don't know what happened to her before we got her to make her so afraid, but she lived in hiding all her little life, in closets, under the furniture, behind the loveseat.
We tied a little bell to her collar so we could find her. During the evening or in the middle of the day, we would hear a streak of jingles go zooming down the hallway, and so we knew that Missy was making her move from the box room to the bedroom.
I loved the sound of her bell, telling me just where her little heart was beating.
This is a box full of the kind of bells we hung on Missy's collar. These are the bells I hung on my dress in my scrapbook. They came from a hobby store, the sort of thing we used to buy at the old "five and dime" stores.
Every now and then I'd have a little girl in my class who would come to school with just these same little bells tied on her shoelaces. I know that other teachers made their students take them off. But bells! I'm afraid I found it too magical. Too musical. I don't know why, but it just never seemed like a problem to me. (It didn't happen very often ~ you'd think it would have spread like wildfire.)
They say teachers have eyes in the backs of their heads. Alas, I never felt that I did. But it made me smile every time I knew, without looking, exactly where my little Tiffany or Tatiana or Tameeka was, just by the sound of those bells on her shoes.
Here is the two-page spread for the bell remedy. The page on the left contains the remedy, a flowered hat with ribbons and bells, a coin bag with a collection of bells, and a silver bell cut out of a magazine. The whole page is bordered, top and bottom, with the same ribbon that I used as a belt for the dress on the right.
The dress was so much fun to make! A colorful cotton print over which I laid an apron that came with its own ribbed fringe and the faintest smattering of flowers imprinted upon it. I added the rick-rack at the bottom of the cotton dress and, of course, the bells. There are five bells along the fringe of the apron and one bell at the V of the neckline of the dress.
The apron, although "apron" seems hardly the right word for something so aerial as this particular apron, is made out of some kind of fairy-rainbow-gauze. It comes with its own interior ribbing, with a swirling pattern of color that looks like galaxies whirling around in space. It is see-through if you hold it up to the light.
I wonder what a person who sews clothes ever makes out of such ethereal material??
It is like the kind of lace curtains that shy people peek through before daring to go outside, but those curtains are always antique-white or dove-gray or biscuit-brown, and this one, if it were a curtain, would be a very unshy, kaleidoscopic, gypsy curtain.
In searching for "bells in art," I found this work of art by Diego Velázquez: "Porträt des Infanten Philipp Prosper". It is a portrait of little Philipp Prosper, who only lived from 1657-1661. A little boy in fragile health, wearing what we think of today as a girl's dress, standing so tall and bravely, with "tiny bells and lucky amulets" decorating his smock.
Knowing how short his little life was, I'm so glad he got to wear those bells, if (perhaps) only for this painting. Don't you know that he loved the jingle that they made?
The rest of the secret remedy book is full of blank pages. I left them blank on purpose to show children that there is still much to be written, to be thought about, to be discovered, to be created, and, in particular, to show children that there are many more pages for many more remedies!
The blank page! What to put on it? I wonder what kind of remedy you would put here? What curious or simple little thing has worked for you, or for your children, or your grandchildren, or your class, or an elderly relative, or a troubled friend? Or if you asked a child what they thought would be the best remedy for feeling better on a bad day, what did they say?
Oh, I do wish you would tell me just one little remedy that you know about!!
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