The first present under our tree? Made by Little A in July, all by himself. He's all right. |
When August came, the kids could not wait to get their class
and teacher assignments from school. They’d been anticipating this moment for
at least a month—yes, they love school. They just do! In any case, we stopped
by the mailboxes on the way home. The kids tore open their envelopes in the
backseat and S found out that, once again, she will not have any of her close
friends in any of her classes this year. Even as she said, “It’s okay. I’m used
to it,” I could hear the disappointment in her voice.
We all separated to unpack from our weekend away; I figured
she needed time to process alone anyway. Next time I saw S, she had cleaning
supplies and was headed upstairs to clean the bathroom, her weekly chore. Then,
when I went over to the sofa to fold the four loads of laundry sitting there, it
took me a minute to figure out what I was seeing. All the laundry had been
folded. I’m super picky about my laundry, so I usually hog that chore, yet here
it was, done. I knew it hadn’t been either of the boys, so it must have been S.
I thanked her for doing it and she shrugged me off, so I
called in her dad for reinforcement. At bedtime, he casually said, “Thank you
for folding my laundry.” And our daughter’s reply blew us both away. “I felt
sad. When I feel sad, helping makes me feel better.”
When my brain caught up to her amazingly insightful comment,
I let her know that she’d spoken a deep truth and that a lot of people have to
grow up a lot more before they find that way of coping. Internally, my
mom-brain kept asking, “HOW did she learn that? What did it?” I still don’t
have an answer. Somehow, somewhere, enough adversity crept into her
life—without my planning or arranging it—to teach her that altruism is one of
the most effective ways to improve our quality of life. Damn. That’s amazing.
On a lighter note, both our kids are enjoying the freedom of
our new neighborhood. With great sidewalks, walking paths, and a few dirt roads
and without the traffic of our old neighborhood, they’ve ridden their bikes
constantly. Toward the end of summer, Little A’s bike bought it—the back end of
the chain assembly warped so that it was sticking through the spokes. (We found
out later it had been assembled with the wrong tension.) Anyway, the bike
couldn’t be ridden or walked. So S told her brother to walk her bike, while she
picked up his bike and carried it a quarter mile home.
That beautiful, precious, and—let’s face it—unnecessarily
difficult solution touched the heart of this ‘80s child. That moment could have
happened to any of us who grew up with long summer days of being “neglected”—at
least by today’s standards. And maybe our kids didn’t take the easiest option,
so maybe we did mention that S could have left her brother with his bike,
ridden home, and gotten an adult with a car to come get both brother and bike,
but what we said over and over—what I hope stuck—was, “You made it work. You
did it. You took care of each other and got it done.”
And I still don’t know what experience gave S that internal
gear. Was it all her attempts, failures, and ultimate successes in circus? Spending
time at an outdoor, overnight summer camp in the woods? Seeing the fruits of
her faithful piano practice? Doing “adult” chores alongside her parents? Living
with parents who stumble and screw up all the time but never give up? Some peer
drama I don’t even know about?
If I’m honest, I think it comes down to attitude. Whatever
we parents seek in our children, we will find. Maybe it’s because her dad and I
look, ever and always, for strength, empathy, responsibility, and perseverance in
our children. Maybe it’s not so much the quality or quantity of the challenges that fall into their lives, but
how we ask them to respond. Maybe it’s the confidence we have in them, the
confidence they borrow until they have enough of their own.
S voluntarily spent hours at Halloween using her circus skills to spot other kids on the rings. She's all right. |