“Is it hard to learn how to do that?”
Looking over my shoulder, I know that his curiosity is more
than pre-teen-ness. The conversations about things not-so-childish have
steadily increased in recent months, dialogue he gleefully enjoys as he stands
eye to eye with me. When he kisses my cheek, he no longer stretches to the tip
of his toes and our dialogue is increasingly laced with the sprinkling of world
events and impressive NHL maneuvers he has absorbed online.
“Not at all, if you do it right. Maybe when you’re a bit
older I’ll teach you how to do this.”
I am untethered, a feeling that has me afraid and ill at
ease. In just two weeks we could be without a home and we have, as of right
now, nowhere to go. Nothing is packed, I have no idea what school Thing 1 and
Thing 2 could land at (because that requires knowing where we will live), and I
am stretched well beyond capacity from 8 to 5. Snide remarks imply I will, once
again, prove incapable of showing up this holiday season in any other form but
solo and I am suffocating under the silent screams in my head that I keep
contained to avoid altercation and affronts.
The flat tire. The broken windshield. Nanny who abruptly
failed to show. A math project soaked in hot chocolate. Emergency visit to the
orthodontist. The smell of death coming through the car’s air vents. The ice
cream delivery truck that slid around the corner and right into my rump.
All of which left me overwhelmed by the weight of everything
until it spilled over in waves in the dark and the quiet of another lonely
night.
“And then someday I can pour you a glass of wine so that you
can sit down and rest for a change. You’re always doing everything for everyone
else.”
“Someday you’ll understand that sometimes you do something
not because it’s what you want to do, or because it benefits you. Sometimes you
do things because they matter to someone else or because you want to make them
happy.”
“And … sometimes … you just have to do things yourself.”
POP!
No comments:
Post a Comment