25 months
Posted on | March 16, 2007 |
Snow is falling again, though last week the grass started to show, barely green, in muddy patches in the yard. The temperatures were in the fifties and the creek running through the meadow down our road, was swollen with snowmelt, its blue-black water spreading out across the snowy expanse of buried grass like a bruise. Now, they’re calling for three feet of snow—tonight—and the mud on the driveway is frozen in stiff tracks.
More snow means more days spent clambering into boots and mittens in our slate-floored entryway, which is interminably heaped with outer things, jackets hanging three deep on every hook. It means more fights with you about wearing your fire-engine-red snowsuit; more pell-mell chases around the living room to capture you, half squealing with delight, half wailing in frustration. It means the mourning doves and starlings and jays and chickadees that you delight to watch gathering at our feeder by the dozens, will huddle tonight in the pines, heads tucked deep into the downy warmth of their bodies. It means that spring, certain in it’s coming, is still not here.
Do you remember spring, little one? Do you remember how the dandelions plunge up from the verdant green, like a thousand bright yellow suns across our lawn? How suddenly in the span of a month buds are everywhere, and throngs of insects, and the shrill, vibrant chorusing of peepers in the swamps?
We bought you a new pair of red rubber ladybug boots today, because mud season is just around the corner, and though you haven’t truly experienced it yet, mud is certain to become one of your favorite things.
Tonight the wind whips around the north corner of the house, howling, low and soft. Upon hearing it earlier, you looked up with wide eyes, and said, “Daddy, what dat?” Now you’re snug in your crib, curled on your sheepskin wearing red stripped pajamas, and we’re hoping you’ll sleep till morning, but the past few weeks have been iffy in this department.
Sleep deprivation is by far the worst part of being a parent. It feels a little being pushed up against the chain-link fence by the bully at school; the lunch-money quarters smooth and round in your closed fist, unwillingly and suddenly exposed. You have no choice. You give them up because that’s what being asked of you; because if you give in quickly, the way your hair is being pulled and the way the back of your neck is being pinched by the silver chinks of fence will likely ease. For now.
When you cry at night there is nothing we can do except reply; go, be there with you as you squirm about, sleepy and disoriented, calling, “Mama, Daddy, where are you?”
Then you say, your nose snuffly because you’re sick, “Need a hug. NEED A HUG.” So we go. We hug you. We take turns, feeling the cold creep up our legs, and a splintering ache begin at the backs of our eyes. We take turns rocking and singing, coaxing you to sleep. Begging you. Or sometimes, when we’re so sleep-stupored and staggering, we carry you to our bed, where inevitably you sleep perpendicular to both of us, thrashing, your feet in my jugular, your head pressed firmly into the crook of Daddy’s neck.
The past few months you’ve woken up more often at night, and I think it’s because you have energy left to burn. Your wiry little body was made to run. Some days, when the thermometer doesn’t pass zero, you don’t get outside at all, and running around the house leaves something to be desired and many things out of place.
This month of winter after your birthday, has also brought delight by the spoonfuls. The world of imaginative play has suddenly opened wide for you, and you play with blocks and cars, building houses and navigating to stores that sell only chocolate and ice cream for breakfast (you little scamp.)
And we read.
We sit snug on the tan couch in the living room, your body pressed against mine. It is the same tan couch I lay on in Connecticut when the midwife first pressed her Doppler stethoscope to my belly and we heard your heartbeat fast and strong like a rushing flurry of wings. Now we sit on it together and read, book after book, you pointing everything out in the pictures and turning the pages, me reading aloud the same stories again and again until I’ve nearly committed to memory every line of your favorites. You love stories now, not just identification books, or books with simple verses. You attend to the characters, and get anxious when they are trouble and laugh with glee when something silly or funny happens. You count, you sing, you talk. All the time.
I can’t wait to spend spring with you. To hear what you have to say about taking hikes in our woods and digging with wooden spoons in the mud. I can’t wait plant a garden with you and to order baby chicks in the mail. You’re such a cool kid now, talking in complete sentences; talking a blue streak. You ask why and what and when a zillion times.
Even when I’m exhausted, I can’t wait to spend every single day with you.
Love,
Mama
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9 Responses to “25 months”
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March 16th, 2007 @ 10:32 pm
he’s so grown now. watched him over your blog for the past 2 years. :>
March 17th, 2007 @ 5:00 am
The world anew through a chld’s eyes, isn’t that the most wonderful thing??
March 17th, 2007 @ 7:52 am
ahhhhhh…
sigh.
this was beautiful.
March 17th, 2007 @ 5:44 pm
not kidding when i say he’s one of the cutest little boys i’ve ever seen. i think it’s the hair.
March 18th, 2007 @ 10:12 am
It’s so funny to think about spring last year, and if they do remember it … it was the first time Porter saw a bee and made the “buzz” connection.
Thank you, again, for sharing bean with us.
March 18th, 2007 @ 5:54 pm
I have to say that your little guy is one extremely cute kid.
And your pictures highlight him so well. 
March 18th, 2007 @ 10:48 pm
Your way with words is beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
March 19th, 2007 @ 4:22 pm
He’s just so precious. I fall in love with him and your little family with each tidbit you share with us. I especially love your description of sleep deprivation - so clever and true. And of course hearing of his “drives” to get ice cream and chocolate for breakfast - that made me laugh!
Boys are pretty dang magical. Of course, maybe that’s why we love them so, even those tricksey grownup ones.
March 19th, 2007 @ 8:08 pm
Your son is just beautiful. And that means a lot because I am genuinely convinced that I have the most beautiful boys. When my son was just past two he started teeting his molars and that gave him a really difficult time. And ear infections…though he never ran a fever with them just a lot of night waking. I can relate to the sleep deprivation having two kids under 2 myself. But it’s the creative things we do that keep us sane I think sometimes. Also, it does go by so quickly and soon they won’t need us in the same way. The way that we no longer need our mommies in that urgent way. However in the middile of the night it is sleep and getting back to the bed that cloaks out thoughts. Anyway, I enjoy your site and pop by frequently to enjoy your thoughts.