To LUGNET HomepageTo LUGNET News HomepageTo LUGNET Guide Homepage
 Help on Searching
 
Post new message to lugnet.generalOpen lugnet.general in your NNTP NewsreaderTo LUGNET News Traffic PageSign In (Members)
 General / 2906
2905  |  2907
Subject: 
Re: Giving away Lego...
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.general
Date: 
Wed, 24 Feb 1999 16:36:23 GMT
Reply-To: 
cmasi@cmasi.chem.tulane.edu!IHateSpam!
Viewed: 
859 times
  
Since, everyone is "sharing"...

My nephew was born with several heart defects, and unfortunately he did not make
it. During one visit to his grave I gave him my favorite knight. My brother cleans
the knight off and stands him up when he goes to visit.

Not exactly a happy ending story, but it made me feel better.

Chris

PS. I have done the share the LEGO with the kid thing.  The son of a professor had
heard that I had a decent sized LEGO collection. So, when I went over to visit for
diner I brought some of my LEGO Collective. I gave him a truck (minfig scale).
Now, the LEGO group is collecting regular payments to feed this poor child's
addiction.

Laura Gjovaag wrote:

My husband and I were entertaining some friends at our house the other day.
One of the couples had a young girl, maybe 6 or 7, who was getting increasingly
bored as the night went on.  Being a good hostess, I invited the poor child up
into our "fun room" to play with my Legos.  To my immense shock, she said she
had never played with them before.

Well!  This was a situation I had to remedy!  We poured out my collection,
plugged in my train, and to the amusement of our other guests (who could hear
the racket quite clearly, I was told later), we played with Lego.  She was
particularly pleased with my firing cannons, and sent a "cannonball" clear
across the room (about 15 feet).  While sending my train around the track, she
discovered the little bicyclist that I use to represent myself.  She admired
the fact that I had a Lego minifig of myself, and mentioned that she rode
horses...

I have a lot of horses.  I was into Castle for a time, and never gave away or
sold the horses.  So I pulled them out and let her pick out her very own horse.
Then, in a small voice, she asked if she could pick one out for her sister,
too.  Then we dredged up saddles for the two horses, then minifigs.  Both the
minifigs I gave her were unique to my collection, but it was worth it when she
showed them to her parents and I explained that she'd gotten one for her sister
as well.

Giving away pieces of Lego is difficult (especially unique ones!), but I made a
kid happy.  I've done this before when we had a guest, but that time the child
was MUCH younger and already familiar with Lego (and I gave him pieces I
already had a lot of).  I'm a nut, but a happy nut.



Message is in Reply To:
  Giving away Lego...
 
My husband and I were entertaining some friends at our house the other day. One of the couples had a young girl, maybe 6 or 7, who was getting increasingly bored as the night went on. Being a good hostess, I invited the poor child up into our "fun (...) (25 years ago, 23-Feb-99, to lugnet.general)

4 Messages in This Thread:



Entire Thread on One Page:
Nested:  All | Brief | Compact | Dots
Linear:  All | Brief | Compact
    

Custom Search

©2005 LUGNET. All rights reserved. - hosted by steinbruch.info GbR