A Museum For Everybody
I'll admit it. I'm a bit terrified to take my kids to a museum. Let's face it: Hudson is two. His mission in life is to seek and destroy. Maisie has sensory issues. All the cool things to see sometimes over stimulate her which means she is a total wiggle worm. ADHD kids have nothing on her.
At the same time, I want my kids to grow up appreciating things different from what they know. A big part of the reason we're here is to the kids can soak up culture. Hudson may not remember it, but I still think this trip will become a part of his soul - or I hope so anyway.
Today, we found the perfect museum for kids - and adults, too. I mean - PERFECT! I'd read about it, but - as I already said - I was scared to take the kids alone. Tom called the shots today so out we headed to one of Singapore's must-see sites: The Peranakan Museum.
The Peranakans are a unique cultural group here in Southeast Asia. Long ago, rich traders came from other countries like China and India. Some traders stayed behind and married local girls. These blended families created a new culture famous for it's stunningly beautiful clothes, furniture, jewelry and even pottery. I desperately wanted to take pictures, but my flash wouldn't stop going off. Tom took pictures with his phone for me, but they don't want to download. Wah! So... I suggest Googling Peranakan Museum, hitting images and taking a gander. You'll like what you see.
Yea, yea, we've all seen cool museums with fabulous clothes and awe-inspiring jewelry, but never before have I seen a cultural museum with so much emphasis on children. For starters, the kids' admission was free and when we first arrived, Maisie and Hudson were both given a paper wheel of colors. Each room had a press-type stamp. Maisie had a ball rushing from room to room looking for the stamp machines, putting her paper down and then imprinting a stamp. Even Hudson got into it!
Some rooms had special exhibits with holes in them for little hands to reach inside so they could touch things like metal belt buckles and wooden carvings.
While the kids had fun, Tom and I actually learned something! We were both really impressed with the quality of the exhibits. They even had a wedding procession complete with a dozen or so mannequins each dressed to the hilt. A Peranakan wedding lasts for twelve days. Silly us, we worry about our four-hour affair. Imagine planning twelve days of events and clothes! The museum also has a wedding bed, an ornately-decorated room of sorts. There were plenty of other clothes, furniture, pottery and the like. My favorite is always the jewelry. I am my mother's daughter after all.
There was also a place for anybody to dress up and record themselves acting a scene from "Emily of Emerald Hill," a very famous, one-woman Singaporean play about a woman's journey from Peranakan newlywed to matriarch. We got Maisie to recite one line from the script. She giggled pretty hard when she saw herself on tape! Hudson just liked climbing on the inlaid chair.
The kids favorite part of the day was hands-down the craft room. One or two Sundays a month (we picked the right day totally by accident!), the museum does a craft for kids. Today - in honor of the Mooncake Festival - we made a Chinese lantern. I say we because it was a complicated process. Maisie did very little of it while Tom and I spent a good half hour constructing the thing. The final product was a pretty cool lantern - mostly pink (duh!) - that we'll take with us to the lantern walk the final night of the festival.
Also in the craft room were a bunch of dress up clothes. Maisie LOVED this! She got to dress up like a Peranakan little girl and felt like a princess. A girl's outfit includes a sarong held up by a metal belt, beaded or embroidered blouse, three pins, beaded slippers and flowers in the hair. Somewhere she must have seen Asian women putting their hands together and bowing because that's what she kept doing. She really cracks me up! Hudson and Tom? They each wore a batik shirt. Hudson wanted to wear the beaded shoes, too!
Poor Hudson!He started out having a ball at the museum, but by the end, he was not a happy camper. He is sick as a dog tonight. He's had a cold for the past few days. Actually, we've all had a cold and I've even had a low-grade fever. This afternoon when we got home? Hudson was hacking up and lung and crying non-stop. After I gave him some honey, Advil (thank God I brought some as they don't sell it here!) and food, he cheered up dramatically. He didn't eat much for lunch so I think he was mostly hungry. I'm praying that he'll have a really good night and can go to school tomorrow. It's his first day - EVER!!!! Fingers crossed feel like going!