Right now, right here
Posted on | June 3, 2008 |
At school, the days are spiraling down. We make space mud and go outside for extra recess where I sit on the grass and they crowd around me, suddenly towering tall, every single one yelling for my attention. “Teacher! Teacher! Look at this!” “Teacher can we race?” “Teacher! Watch me!”
I close my eyes and feel the sun on my eyelids and my pulse in my chest. The backs of my eyelids are sunbursts of red and shade. The world is simpler this way, eyes closed. Immediately I turn inward, feel my breath, remember to breathe. Eventually they stop yelling. One persistent voice keeps at it, softer now, “Teacher, teacher!”
Above us there is a sun dog in the sky. I tell them the weather will change. I tell them rain is coming, and later it does.
At home the road is slick with mud. The chickens come out from the coop and ruffle their feathers. The sky is the color of paper. Lilacs lean towards the ground, heavy with rain. Bean wakes up from his late nap grouchy, and grouchy by three year old standards seems to mean nonstop howling in indignation for a half an hour. No he doesn’t want a snack, or a snuggle, or a walk, or some milk. But then two seconds later he’ll maybe change his mind.
When he’s asleep, he looks little to me still. I see in his face the tiny baby’s face I stared at for hours, when he still made dolphin noises and his whole body could rest snuggly against my torso. But then he awakens and the turbulence childhood is there like a weather map, hovering. He looks boyish, lanky, bright-eyed, determined.
When he was two, I could distract him. “Look at the moon!” I’d say eagerly, or “Let’s go get some mango for snack,” and any consternation would melt like a popsicle on a warm day. “Okay,” he’d nod agreeably, smudging tears with the back of his hand. But three? Three is entirely different. He holds on to things. Dwells on them. And his emotions sweep over him like waves.
I remember going to the beach when I was a kid, growing up in Los Angeles. The sand was often oil specked, and the waves hit hard. If you turned your back when you were building sand castles, you’d get smacked down, spun under, your t-shirt or bathing suit twisted and wrung out. Bean’s moods hit him like that now. Everything is full throttle. Urgent delight. Intense frustration. Utter grief.
On walks I’ve started sharing my big Cannon EOS 20-D with him. It’s probably not advisable. I’m likely courting disaster, a broken lens, worse. But he has an eye for framing the most beautiful shots. He takes the camera so earnestly, the strap slung over his shoulder. And I love the way his pictures are—kid level, slightly askew.
It is hard to resist the urge to tell him how to do things. “Take a picture of this, point the lens this way, no that’s too dark,” and just see what he comes up with. But I realize right away that I’m pushing the river when I do. The kid’s got his own eye.
On a different note: I’m on the brink of something. Tilting. Can’t say yet what, but things are afoot. Possibly. Maybe. Good things. Keep your fingers crossed for me.
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10 Responses to “Right now, right here”
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June 3rd, 2008 @ 4:26 pm
consider them crossed
June 3rd, 2008 @ 4:56 pm
hope
June 3rd, 2008 @ 9:53 pm
My fingers are always, always crossed for you. Luck and blessing should always rain around you…
As for the Bean and the camera, maybe get him his own, slightly less fragile one? Even a simple point and shoot?
June 4th, 2008 @ 2:48 am
Oh I’m right there with you with my three year old. My old tricks - the distracations - don’t work anymore. He’s taken to screaming. Just holding out his hand for something - what?! what?! - and screaming. I tell him to pick a language, he can tell me what he wants in either language (he’s bilingual English-Swiss) just pick. a. language. Screams. And whining. And…something. Some new turbulent something. Three. May you pass quickly. There’s a book called “Your Three Year Old: Friend or Enemy?” that I might have to get!
And how funny, I let my guy take pictures with my Nikon D-80. And it’s true. They’re good at it somehow.
June 4th, 2008 @ 10:29 am
Fingers crossed, eyes heavenward!!
June 4th, 2008 @ 2:23 pm
I just love the way you write so beautifully about even the hardest of things! I always encouraged my girls to use my rebel when I had it and now they love my 30d and I have even let them use my 5d at times…I think it’s so fun seeing what they see. At 8 and almost 7 they each have a sony cybershot and I should do a little scrapbook with the photos they have taken. they get so much detail and I love it!
glad you let him use your camera! can you show us some of beans’ photos?!
tara
June 4th, 2008 @ 3:33 pm
What’s a sun dog? Here in Sweden we hold thumbs instead of crossing fingers. Makes it hard to type, but mine are held for you!
June 4th, 2008 @ 9:11 pm
A sun dog is that kind of rainbow you see in cirrus clouds in a mostly clear sky–usually somewhere near the sun. In Norse Mythology I think there was a wolf or something that chased the sun… sun dog? Something like that.
June 4th, 2008 @ 10:42 pm
Fingers crossed for you!
June 5th, 2008 @ 12:59 pm
What beautiful writing and I love your story! I am a teacher also, middle school right now, but I used to teach the primary grades. Sometimes I miss the sweetness of the little ones, but teaching art is incredible. My son is 15, but the days of a 3 year old are still so clear! Thank youfor sharing your afternoon moments. Roxanne