One of your favorite games to play as a preschooler was the Scooby Doo haunted house game. We bought it at Toys 'R Us.
We could be any of the Scooby Doo gang, and a spinner would tell us what to do. Sometimes when we landed on a square, we had to push down a ghost, and that would set in motion all of these traps. If our character got caught in a trap, we had to start over!
The game was really hard to keep together! It was made of cardboard and plastic, and when pressing the ghost, sometimes some of the traps on the board came apart! Still, we had lots of fun with it.
At above right is a picture of what the game looked like.
I have created this site so that my son, Kieran Edward Bignell, will be able to easily find me, his father, Rob Bignell, and so that he will know that I love him, that I always have, and that I always will. Against our wishes, we have been torn from one another's lives and kept apart, separated by distance and time. But one day, Kieran will seek me. Kieran - I am here for you. Come to me.
Monday, May 13, 2013
Sunday, May 12, 2013
Remember your Batcave playset?
One of your favorite toys to play with when a prechooler was the Batcave by Imaginext.
The playset unfolded, had two levels (four if you count the floor and the cave roof), boasted an elevator, a chamber that could be closed, and several entry points. We bought a bunch of accessories with it, including the Batcopter and some of the Batman villains.
We used the playset for lots of fun besides playing Batman. I remember on many occasions it became part of the rebel base for our Star Wars character or somehow was incorporated into other storylines using our other action figures.
Above left is a picture of the Batcave playset we had!
The playset unfolded, had two levels (four if you count the floor and the cave roof), boasted an elevator, a chamber that could be closed, and several entry points. We bought a bunch of accessories with it, including the Batcopter and some of the Batman villains.
We used the playset for lots of fun besides playing Batman. I remember on many occasions it became part of the rebel base for our Star Wars character or somehow was incorporated into other storylines using our other action figures.
Above left is a picture of the Batcave playset we had!
Saturday, May 11, 2013
My email to you for May 11, 2013
Here is my
email sent to you on May 11, 2013, in case you did not receive it:
Dear Kieran,
How are you doing? I’m doing fine. I had so much fun with you
yesterday! I can’t wait to see you again in just two weeks on the afternoon of
May 24.
Thank you for introducing your stuffie penguins to me! They look
like they’ve received lots of love and affection from you, and that’s cool. I
remember how much you enjoyed the penguin cartoons that you would watch on the DVD
player when we made those long drives from Palmdale to San Diego. It was always
a great pleasure of mine to hear you laugh and giggle from the back seat!
Putting together the “Star Trek” legos was a lot of fun, too. You
did a great job of following the instructions. We still have the Klingon ship
and the transporter to build. There were a couple of other “Star Trek” lego
models at the toy store, so I shall pick them up for the next time we get
together. I think there were some other characters we can get as well. They
also had Lone Ranger Lego sets, so maybe we’ll do those when we run out of “Star
Trek” kits!
Is your wooden car model holding up well? If the wheels ever fall
off, you just have to use some wood glue to put them back together. You did a
very nice job of painting the car!
You were very good at playing War! I shall have to find some
additional games for us to play. Have you ever heard of the game “Operation”? You
have to pick up little pieces out of a “body,” but if you touch the body it
buzzes and you don’t get the piece. Whoever has the most pieces at the end
wins. I bet you would like that game. Speaking of the body, the next time we
get together I also will bring the human body book with the skeleton that we can
put together.
I am glad you enjoyed the book about Egypt, too. It had a lot of interesting
pictures, didn’t it? One of your favorite places to go when I lived in
Encinitas/San Diego was the Museum of Man, which had a whole section of Egyptian
mummies and sarcophaguses as well as a great children’s area for learning about
Egypt. We’d take the trolley there, and on the walk over from the trolley stop
would look around in the sculpture garden and sometimes have lunch in the open
air cafeteria next to it. Their gift store was a lot of fun, too – if I
remember correctly, we got you some Egypt and Darwin toys, there. Anyway, the
museum was one of your favorite places, and you’d even beg me to go there!
We had so much fun that we didn’t have time to do everything, like
play with the Hot Wheels car, the map puzzle, or the sticker play book. Maybe
next time!
Well, that is all for now. I love you and miss you like crazy. I’ll
write again next Saturday and will see you on May 24!
Love,
Dad
Friday, May 10, 2013
'Kieran's Quote of the Day'
When you were a preschooler, you had a "fan club"! Every once in a while, I'd post on my Facebook page something humorous that you said. I called them "Kieran's Quote of the Day."
People loved them! They'd share your quotes with teir friends and leave comments.
Here are a couple of those quotes:
>>(As passing an aisle of girls toys at Target): "What a waste of shelf space!"
>>(After coming down from a mountaint op on a hike): "Daddy, my hat still up there."
People loved them! They'd share your quotes with teir friends and leave comments.
Here are a couple of those quotes:
>>(As passing an aisle of girls toys at Target): "What a waste of shelf space!"
>>(After coming down from a mountaint op on a hike): "Daddy, my hat still up there."
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Our last time together for some time...
One year ago today marked the last time I would see you for six months. I picked you up after school and brought you back to our condo in Palmdale where we had dinner.
I will remember forever our last moments together. After dinner, we were in your room next to the closet counting out quarters. I was teaching you how to divide them out so you would know when you had a dollar and then how to count those groups so that we would have enough "dollars" - we were going to get Jane from her room and walk to the ice cream stand on the corner and get some cones.
Only after a long struggle in the courts would I see you again six months later, on Nov. 9, 2012. As writing this, I continue to pursue your legal and moral right to see me. Because I love you, I promise that I never will retreat from my duty as your father to ensure your rights and needs are met.
I will remember forever our last moments together. After dinner, we were in your room next to the closet counting out quarters. I was teaching you how to divide them out so you would know when you had a dollar and then how to count those groups so that we would have enough "dollars" - we were going to get Jane from her room and walk to the ice cream stand on the corner and get some cones.
Only after a long struggle in the courts would I see you again six months later, on Nov. 9, 2012. As writing this, I continue to pursue your legal and moral right to see me. Because I love you, I promise that I never will retreat from my duty as your father to ensure your rights and needs are met.
Going to Germany with Guard in 1986
During college, I took three weeks off and went to Germany! It wasn't a tourist, though; my National Guard unit went there on a three-week training mission called REFORGER in January 1986.
The idea of the training was for us to go through the experience of being called to active duty and serving in Europe in case of a suspected Soviet invasion of western Europe. At the time, the Untied States and its allies in the West were engaged in a Cold War with the Soviet Union.
After spending a couple of days at Fort McCoy, Wis., we flew from Camp Douglas, Wis., on a C-130 to Belgium. Along the way, we stopped at an airport in Maine and in the Azores!
From Belgium, we were flown to our base in Grafenwoehr, Germany, and then sent into the field. Our position overlooked a pass through two low mountains near the West German-Czechoslovakia border that would be a major invasion route for the Soviets if they entered the West.
We also got a day off to tour a town. We went through an old castle that was several hundred years old and walked through a German town.
The idea of the training was for us to go through the experience of being called to active duty and serving in Europe in case of a suspected Soviet invasion of western Europe. At the time, the Untied States and its allies in the West were engaged in a Cold War with the Soviet Union.
After spending a couple of days at Fort McCoy, Wis., we flew from Camp Douglas, Wis., on a C-130 to Belgium. Along the way, we stopped at an airport in Maine and in the Azores!
From Belgium, we were flown to our base in Grafenwoehr, Germany, and then sent into the field. Our position overlooked a pass through two low mountains near the West German-Czechoslovakia border that would be a major invasion route for the Soviets if they entered the West.
We also got a day off to tour a town. We went through an old castle that was several hundred years old and walked through a German town.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Your love for Smokey the Bear
Just finished editing a children's book called "The Best Bear Hug Ever" and that got me thinking about how much you liked Smokey the Bear as a preschooler!
You first learned about Smokey the Bear when we hiked the Angeles National Forest in California. We went to a fire lookout tower, and the "prize" for children who make it to the fire tower was a Smokey the Bear comic book and button.
You couldn't read, of course, so I told you the life story of Smokey the Bear. You were so concerned that Smokey might not escape the forest fire and were so relieved when the rangers rescued him and nursed him back to health.
You asked me to tell you the story over and over! You also wanted to know if one day we could go see Smokey the Bear's grave in New Mexico (One time when we did drive through New Mexico, though, I got you a Smokey the Bear stuffie.)!
We haven't yet gone to the forest where Smokey lived, but perhaps one day soon we will.
You first learned about Smokey the Bear when we hiked the Angeles National Forest in California. We went to a fire lookout tower, and the "prize" for children who make it to the fire tower was a Smokey the Bear comic book and button.
You couldn't read, of course, so I told you the life story of Smokey the Bear. You were so concerned that Smokey might not escape the forest fire and were so relieved when the rangers rescued him and nursed him back to health.
You asked me to tell you the story over and over! You also wanted to know if one day we could go see Smokey the Bear's grave in New Mexico (One time when we did drive through New Mexico, though, I got you a Smokey the Bear stuffie.)!
We haven't yet gone to the forest where Smokey lived, but perhaps one day soon we will.
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