When Sun-Jay was 2 years old, he began using the word yestertime like a normal word in full and long sentences to include the information that what we were talking about had already happened, but he either didn't know, didn't know how to say, or felt he didn't need to give the date because it already happened and therefore should not be the focus of a conversation trying to determine what best there is to do right now for a future together that maybe also happens to share the singularly present-tense idea of real joy with many people as possible. For example, I could say to him, "remember yestertime when you had your 4th? birthday and you walked around the indoor playground pretty much ignoring all your classmates while making sure not to let go of the hand of Alice V..." (gee, honesty, I only accurately can say I recall the last name there.) or Remember yestertime, we got a floating balloon on a string from Golden Griddle at the Koslov mall in Barrie, and we ...