Tears at hockey

IMG_7101

From a more placid moment last week

I recognize that things are moving fast most of the time in our family, and that I have a lot of things I’m trying to do, but most of the time it feels like it hangs together.  Usually we even fit in time for some quiet reading and a walk around the block and a few minutes of downtime.  That and hundreds of emails and writing and running and packing lunches and laundry and cooking and … well, writing that makes me tired.  Still, most days, my life – and that of my family – works.

Except when it doesn’t.

Last Monday was one of those days.  I had forgotten that Whit had hockey even though it was a holiday, so at the last minute I had to move my mother’s planned dinner-at-home visit to late afternoon.  We were running late for hockey, and I was snappy and frustrated.  By the time I got Grace and Whit into the car, hockey pads mostly (but not all) on, and headed in the light snow to pick up Whit’s teammate for practice, I was on the verge of tears.

It can turn so fast, can’t it?  Just the night before we had had a wonderful celebration of Whit, dinner at his favorite restaurant, a homemade cake (triple chocolate, which had required my going to three stores to get the ingredients) and presents.  I’d sat at our dining room table, watching the faces of my family in the flicker of candlelight, feeling calm, grateful.  My boy was eight.

But now I stood by the side of the hockey rink, fighting tears.  It was freezing, and in my rush I hadn’t brought a hat or gloves.  I jammed my hands into the pockets of my down coat and pressed my forehead against the cold plexiglass between the rink and me.  I watched Whit skate, feeling my breath coming fast and a tightness in my chest:  I am trying to do so much all at once.  Because of this, I do everything badly.  I am just so tired.

I drew a ragged breath and fought to control the tide of sorrow that rose inside me.  Suddenly I heard Billy Joel in my head: this is the time to remember, ’cause it will not last forever…  I shook my head, new emotion churning around the self-pity.  I felt both chastened and annoyed; I was reminded of my own desperate wish to be here now and of the simultaneous weight of my expectation that I can do so all the time. Is my constant sense of failing to be present getting in the way of my actually being present?

I don’t know.  I don’t think so, because I know I was far less here before I started thinking about this.  But it certainly makes me excruciatingly aware of all the ways and times that I fall short of the engagement in my life I so badly want.

I looked at Whit, his little figure blurred by my tears.  I want so fiercely to fully live these years, to pay attention, not to miss a thing.  But still, so often, I fail.  I allow my own exhaustion or aggravation to occlude the beauty of this ordinary, flawed existence.  It makes me weep to think of all that I have already missed.  I don’t even want to blink, for fear of missing anything else.

For the rest of the night, all I could hear was this:

This are the time to remember
Cause it will not last forever.
These are the days to hold onto
Cause we won’t although we’ll want to.
This is the time, but time is going to change.

 

Oh the places you’ll go

IMG_7032

A couple of weeks ago, we had one of those empty Sunday afternoons that I have come to prize above all others.  But in the moment, I was not prizing anything.  Everybody was cranky, pissy, annoyed.  The sky was spitting rain.  I asked Whit and Grace what they wanted to do, because the only thing that was non-negotiable was that we had to get out of the house. They didn’t want to do anything.  They certainly didn’t want to do anything together.

Fine.  I made an executive decision.  Whit needed some more Rotten School books to read anyway, so off we went to the library.  Luckily the main branch is open on Sunday afternoons.  We rode up the elevator to the third floor and I watched in wonder as the library worked its magic.  Extraordinary.  They were almost immediately calm, engrossed.  We had just been talking about the Sheep in a Jeep picture books and Whit wanted to see them, so we headed to the picture book section.

These days, we don’t usually set up shop in the picture book section.  But that day we did.  We found Sheep in a Jeep, read it, and then Grace and Whit both turned to the shelves.  Whit pulled out a stack of Dr. Seuss books, and Grace found several old favorites to revisit.  We sat together at a small round table and leafed through books.  I looked up.

IMG_7038

And instantly found myself blinking away tears.  Oh, the places you’ll go, my newly-minted eight year old.  Yes, the places you’ll go.  I can imagine them, can see them beginning to shimmer on the horizon, those places, away from home, away from this moment, away from me.  You’re going, and I am waving, and I couldn’t be prouder.

We stayed at the library for a long time.  I personally adore picture books and am glad to see that Grace and Whit still wanted to immerse themselves in them.  There was no scoffing about “baby books” or impatience or frustration.  There was just the quiet, suffused with contentment, the flipping of pages, the whispers of parents and squeaks of babies and mumbles of toddlers.

Then we went to the playground outside the park to play for a bit before heading home for dinner.  The rain had stopped and the sky was a thick, dense plane of gray cloud.  Grace and Whit played together, laughing, making up games.

IMG_7045

I sat on the swings and watched them play.  They leapt from rock to rock, chased each other around the deserted playground, and made up games together.  I’ve written before about my intense pride when I watch my children playing in creative, unstructured ways, about how I’m probably more thrilled by creative play than I am by conventional accomplishments.

I swung and watched them, and before I knew it my cheeks were wet with tears again.  How much longer will they want to spend a Sunday afternoon with me, at the library, at the playground?  Sure, not long.  The familiar awareness of how short this time is gripped me, and I felt like I couldn’t breathe.  Somehow my keen sense of the fleeting nature of this moment is both immensely familiar and, still, so powerful that it brings me to my knees.  My nostalgia for this time in my own life – even as I live it – is nothing short of overwhelming.

I swung back and forth, watching them laugh and jump, unable to hear what they were saying to each other, feeling tears run down my face.  Oh, the places they’ll go.  Oh, the places they are already going.

Eight years old

IMG_6891

Dear Whit,

Yesterday you turned eight.  I don’t even have words to express my incredulity at this fact.  I’ve written before about how the fact of your boy-ness shocked me in the delivery room, and it did, and still sometimes when I gaze at you my emotions shuttle back and forth between sheer wonder at the fact that I’m raising a boy and an overwhelming sense of responsibility to do so right.

Grace is familiar – so familiar sometimes it feels disorienting, like staring into a funhouse mirror and seeing a million reflections of myself and her.  With you, probably because you’re a boy, but also because you’re you, it’s different.  You beguile me and enchant me, you infuriate me and aggravate me, you make me laugh every single day.  I know so clearly what I want for Grace: to be smart and brave.  Of course there’s so much more I want for her, and for you, too.  I think if I had to name one thing I wish for you, though, it’s that I hope you never stop feeling comfortable expressing yourself, always remember that your feelings are both valid and valuable.  I don’t want you to grow to fear either your emotions, which the world might tell you are weakness, or your strength.

You are a deeply sensitive guy, and it’s easy to miss that, because on the surface you are all boy bluster and energy.  Your sense of humor is the first thing anyone who meets you remarks upon, and it’s true that you are really, really funny.  We don’t know where this came from (neither your Dad nor I is particularly funny), but we’re glad it did.  Every family needs a comedian.  But you also exhibit a seam of melancholy for which I feel responsible.  I’m sorry to have given you that inheritance, though I console myself that your predilection towards sorrow will also mean you feel great joy.  I know this first-hand.

This sensitivity manifests most often at bedtime.  One night shortly after we returned from Legoland last summer you couldn’t sleep, and you lay in your bed weeping and weeping that something you had anticipated for so long was over.  Another night, years ago, you dissolved into tears about the fact that you weren’t a baby anymore.  Crying, you bemoaned time’s swift passage, the fact that we can’t “go back.”  We spent a long time going through baby pictures of you, finding your baby socks and the hat you came home from the hospital in.  I was trying to make you feel better, but the truth is I felt the loss so profoundly it felt like the wind was knocked out of me.

Right now your world spins around hockey.  I am so proud of the way you’ve thrown yourself into a very demanding sport.  You practice two or three nights a week, and you leap out of bed at 5 or 6am on Sunday mornings for games.  You literally can’t get enough.  While I know you personally love the sport, your team, and your coaches, I also know that part of your joy comes from knowing you’re following in your father’s (large) footsteps.  As you have gotten older, it’s become clearer and clearer to me how much you adore and esteem – perhaps idolize is not too strong a word – him.  You tell anyone who will listen that you are number fourteen, and the reason is that because that was your father’s number.

hockey

The biggest challenge we have is getting you to do things when you don’t want to.  Unlike your sister, who does something just because an authority figure asked her to, you need to understand why, and why right now, and then you need to understand again.  You ask a lot of questions, and seek to understand the world around you.  This fall you were curious about how the world came to be (what’s the Big Bang?), why water spins going down the drain, and how they get trains, once they’ve made them, onto the tracks.  Luckily we have my father, who we call The Answer Man, to ask, because many of these questions are already well over my head.

You are physically affectionate, and offer me ready hugs.  You love receiving a sweet dreams head-rub before bed and often choose to curl up on the couch right next to me.  We are in the middle of Harry Potter #3, and it is an absolute pleasure to share the world of Hogwarts with you.  I know you’re as smitten as I am: this year you chose to be Harry for Halloween, and you often refer to things from Harry’s world out of the blue, apropos of nothing: The Mirror of Erised and Quidditch bludgers have made recent appearances in our conversations.

You’re just starting to feel self-conscious about your mother hugging and kissing you in front of your friends.  At school, when I drop you off, you prefer to throw a smile and a wave my way these days, and I learned the hard way that banging on the glass and blowing kisses is NOT what a hockey player wants his mother to do during practice.  I could see your red cheeks through your helmet.  I promise, Whit, to try my best not to embarrass you.  I’m pretty sure I’ll fail some of the time, but I promise to try.

You’re a very good reader, though finding books you like is a challenge.  When immersed in a story you’re interested in, you’ll sit happily and read for thirty minutes or more.  When you’re bored by something, it’s a different story (see the relentless questions, above).  Right now you’re reading R.L. Stine’s Rotten School series, and you also have an insatiable appetite for non-fiction books about building, rockets, science, and how things work.

You want to be an engineer when you grow up.  For years I’ve described you as having an “3D orientation” towards the world, and your continuing passion for LEGOs is just one example of this.  You love to do experiments at home with electrical circuits and are beginning to explore small motorized LEGOs.  Watching you at work on one of your projects, I’m often hit with a wave of adoration, and in its wake always comes the remembered awareness that another person is an absolute mystery.  I wish I could spend an hour inside your head, Whit.  I’m confident it’s a technicolor place, with fascinating science experiments and brand-new inventions piled in every corner.

I wish I could convey how much I love you, but I know I can’t.  That day when you arrived in a snowstorm, after 4 hours of intense labor that I experienced mainly by myself, feels like yesterday.  I was shocked by the fact that you were blond, that you were blue-eyed, and that you were a BOY, and I still wonder at all three of these things every day.  I find you inscrutable and extraordinary, hilarious and challenging, beautiful, affectionate, and stubborn.  You’re a picky eater, you refuse to drink carbonated beverages (I am interested to see how this plays out in college), you sleep always and exclusively in boxer briefs, you still hold your well-loved monkey (named Beloved) every night, your favorite picture book, that we still read, is Space Boy, and you look an awful lot like pictures of your father as a kid.

My last baby, my only boy, I love you. I cannot imagine my life without you in it.  I’ll never stop loving you.  No matter what.  Happy, happy birthday.

Mum

Eight years ago today

Jan05.Whit.hospital2

Eight years ago today.

I’ve been smitten ever since.  I love you, SWR.

Jan05

A day with Whit

One day a couple of weeks ago, Whit stayed home from school.  He’d been sick to his stomach the night before, and though he woke up feeling 100% fine, I felt I should abide by the rule that says you can’t come to school if you’ve vomited in the last 24 hours.  I rearranged a bunch of meetings and was able to spend the day at home with Whit.  For most of the day, I was at my desk and he was watching TV, reading, or playing with Legos in the room right next door.  But I managed to carve out a few pockets of time for us to do quiet things together, and it turned into a lovely, lovely day.  One of those absolutely ordinary days that I know I’ll remember forever.

In keeping with my fierce belief in the healing properties of both fresh air and books, we went for a walk to the library.  On the way we walked past a barren bush that was full of sparrows.  Their dun-colored feathers made them almost invisible to the eye, but their music was loud enough to stop Whit in his tracks.  “Do you hear that, Mummy?”  He tilted his head.  I nodded.  He squinted, and leaned towards the bush.  “I guess I can see them, if I look carefully,” he peered even more closely.  “But not at first.  And they are so loud!  It’s magic.”

Yes, Whit, it is.  I’ve been startled by the beauty of the song of sparrows before, and to witness Whit having the same reaction was powerful and surprising-but-not.  We continued down the street.  I pointed out birds’ nests, newly visible in the bare branches of the winter trees.  At one point as we walked he slipped his hand into mine, and I squeezed it, and we walked on.

I asked him what he would like for lunch, letting him choose, as a treat.  And he asked for a Panera grilled cheese, so that is what we got.  Then we drove to the car wash.  As we lurched into the tunnel of the wash, I looked back to watch Whit’s palpable wonder.  His eyes were wide and his head was swiveling back and forth as he watched the action around us.  “Look, Mummy!” (what’s better, ever, to hear than that?)  “Look at the lights!”  Then he held his hand to the window, noting, “I can feel the flaps banging against the side of the car.”  His delight was infectious.

I picked up my phone and noticed several new Safari windows open.  “Have you been on my phone, Whit?”  I glanced back to see a mischievous smile on his face.

“I asking Siri questions.”  I shook my head, smiling.  I am not a Siri fan.  “Siri is really good, you know, because if you don’t have anyone to talk to, you can always talk to her.”  Meet my son: a true extrovert.

Then we went to the farm stand where I buy our Christmas wreaths every year.  We picked out two: boxwood for the front door and pine for the kitchen window over the sink.  Whit counted out 12 paperwhite bulbs, putting each one carefully in a brown paper bag.  The man behind the counter gave him a sheet of space stickers and a lollipop.  As we drove home, dusk gathering around us, Whit sighed, “That man was so nice,” and I thought to myself: please don’t ever, ever stop noticing kindness in strangers, the magic of bird song, the adventure of a car wash.

When we got home we hung the wreath on the door and walked upstairs.  I had to get back on my computer.  But first I looked out the window.  “Whit, look!”  he poked his head around the corner from the family room.  “Look at that sky.”  I pulled him onto my lap, his legs long and knobby, his feet almost touching the floor, and we watched the sky streak with pink through my office window.  He leaned his head back against my shoulder.

“Mummy?”  I pressed a kiss into the side of his cheek.  “I really love days like this with you.”

Oh, my Whit, my still-seven year old son, my savant, my sage, my spirited comedian.  I do too.