Have your kids ever given you an incredulous look because the answer to your question is so obvious – to them? I’m pretty sure I’ve given that kind of look to my children many times, even though I know they are outside the box kind of thinkers. In fact, I’m not sure they know there even is a “box”. Some things just seem so apparent to me that it’s hard to remember that my kids don’t approach life in the same way I do. Our kids can feel that same kind of frustration if we don’t immediately understand their way of thinking when something seems very obvious to them. A few days ago I was preparing to do some school work with my Beckie, and she was flitting around the house burning up some excess energy. I called her in to the dining room, and she came right away. I turned my back to take our books off the shelf, and when I turned around she was gone. I arranged the books for the first subject of the day and called Beckie back into the dining room. She popped right over, but when I leaned over to clear some space on the table for our globe, she darted off again. This yo-yo action in and out of the room happened several times within a couple of minutes. I called her back, and asked her why she kept leaving the room when she knew it was time to do school. That’s when I got the look that said, “Why are you asking me a question when the answer is so obvious?” I waited for her reply, truly not knowing the answer, and she simply sighed and said, “To dance!” She said it in that way kids have of letting you know you should have known the answer but they will try to patiently explain it for you. I think that’s a good reason and a way for hyperactivity to be expressed in an acceptable way, though it explains in part why school sometimes takes us longer than I expect it too. In fact, if we didn’t actually have to get anything done, I might have joined her in dancing.