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Boat Ride Bookends, Part Two

After the boat ride and swimming, we were shocked suddenly to discover it was lunch time. And once lunch was over, we were shocked at how tired the kids were — except the two youngest.

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But soon after, everyone was rested and the water called us back again. The little puppy running around the lakefront — dubbed Cutie by the kids — was quite an attraction, too. In fact, more so in many ways. Even when the puppy wasn’t there, they played as if she were there. “We must find Cutie!” L cried out, fishing for her with a bit of line and a magnet. “She must have fallen in!”

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But she hadn’t — we were the only ones to fall in. Make that jump in — the Girl’s newest water obsession.

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Meanwhile, the youngest looked on and ate an early dinner.

With a twelve-week-old, our schedule is his schedule. “He ate at three,” K begins, figuring the next feeding time and its impact on our less-than-tight schedule. Sometimes that’s a challenge; at the lake, it was inconsequential. After all, how many vacations run on a tight schedule? Well, scratch that: I know some who run their vacations like boot camp.

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Evening came and we decided on another boat ride. The Boy took it all in stride: his expression consistently said, “Oh well, here we go again. This should be fun…”

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And it was for some of us. L got to drive a boat for the first time. It was a carefree frolic for her. No stress; no worries, no fear.

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We returned to find brilliance.

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Brilliance that shifted.

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Afternoon at the Lake

L has fallen in love with water this summer. Among her favorite sports to watch in London are swimming and diving; she asks daily to go to the pool; she flops about in the tub in her best imitation of Rebecca Soni. Despite her consistent love of water, though, she wasn’t that wild about the beach when we first went. Or when we went the second time. So when we headed to North Carolina with friends for a weekend at the lake, I was a but curious how she would take swimming in the open water.

As might be expected, she was a bit cautions at first. Thought she’d given up her arm floats earlier in the summer, she learned that one of the rules of the pier was that children must always wear flotation devices — and since there were no more swim belts, the Girl was stuck wearing her arm floats again.

There was also initial concern regarding what else might be swimming with her — or under her. Talk of an enormous catfish that broke a line earlier in the day had her worried and sitting on the edge for a while.

But only for a while.

Thus began a weekend of firsts. Fishing, for example — something that requires more patience than I thought the Girl had ever shown in her whole life. Something that involves touching things the Girl might not like to touch, like hooks and worms and fish. Something that can pass hours with only one reward: the peace of the wait.

Yet the girl is growing, and she’s always surprising us with what she can do, what she’s willing to try, what we can force her to eat. (Some humor intended there.) Fishing became the big hit for the Girl.

Yet there were the old stand-bys — what kid in history has been able to turn down an invitation to watch a film while sitting in an old water heater box?

Cramped, stuffy, view-blocking — it didn’t matter. What mattered was to be in the box. The movie was only secondary entertainment.

With a full moon that night, though, adults had other forms of less-cramped, more serene entertainment.

Playground

The earliest memories center on the large rectangular jungle gym in the center, or so it would eventually seem to me, of an enormous playground. It was a fort, battleship, a prison, starship, a dungeon, a jungle, a towering inferno, and anything and everything else we needed in first grade. With its seemingly towering western side, it also gave me my first inclination of hierarchy and where I might stand in a given hierarchy. The brave boys, the boys who were already above -- literally and figuratively -- the average play of a first or second grader would climb to the top, straddle a top beam, and sit there for most of recess, calling out to us mortals below. Or perhaps it was simply they couldn't fit in. Who knows -- it's been thirty-plus years, and divining motivations of those in my everyday life is difficult enough. Still, I felt them above me, sensed them above, and always thought they were somehow different.

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Just down the hill were the swings, which never held much interest to me. I wanted to use my imagination: swings weren't conducive to that. Back and forth, back and forth, the more athletic boys in later grades would use the swings to show off their bravery, leaping from in-motion swings from heights that made me dizzy.

The swings were not my thing, but just south of the swings, a crag of rocks stretched out endlessly, with perfect curves and shapes to make the most majestic star cruiser ever built. There was a cockpit carved perfectly out of the rock, and toward the tail of the ship, a perfect gun torret for fending off attacks from marauding aliens. When we jocks (and even then, they could be called jocks) chased us nerds away from the serve-all jungle gym, this is where we came. And when we were lucky, we got to use both -- mothership and explorer.

As we moved through elementary school, the playground grew with us. A new jungle gym made a better prison/dungeon than the old rectangular beast, so we made a move. A new spider-like contraption took away some of the spill-over from the rectangular beast, so I and my small group of space-loving friends took permanent possession of the dungeon and rock formation.

Unless it was a day that the teacher emerged from the school carrying a rubber, inflatable ball under her arm -- a sure sign of impending disaster. We all knew where to go without being told: the large field to the east of the playground.

It was to be a kickball day. These were the days when all my inadequacies and worries seemed to come to fruition: always among the last picked, I hated kickball with a passion. The boys that hung out -- literally -- at the top of the jungle gym loved it. It wasn't that I was not athletic. Indeed, I was a fast runner and always looked forward to the 50 yard dash (or was it only 40 yards?) during the fall and spring physical fitness tests. I knew I would have one of the top three times, and by fourth grade, the teacher always had Ernie and me go last. He always beat me, but I never worried: I could shine in second place just as well. Kickball, though, just didn't do it for me: a rubber ball, bouncing along the roughly turfed field as it approached, with a team of fifteen of my peers all waiting to catch the ball I would inevitably send skyward as the ball took a small bounce just as I kicked.

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It was the beginning of my sense of never truly fitting in, my feeling of always been just on the outside. Never popular nor particularly unpopular, something that continued though junior high and high school.

With the Girl entering kindergarten in a few short weeks, I've begun thinking about my own school experiences and how I might like L's to be different and what elements I might prefer to keep as similar to my own -- as if I really have any say in the matter at all. Yet, I do: as a parent, I see behaviors and habits form that I quickly correct, explaining things like, "Being unwilling to share will make it difficult to make friends" and "Playing doesn't mean telling your playmates what to pretend; that will make friendships hard." We explain; we correct; we role play. Soon, we'll see how successful our efforts have been.

Mixing

The Girl has fallen in love with the Olympics. "Can I watch gymnastics tonight instead of reading before bed?" she asked last night. This morning, it's the same. She has her favorites, but she'll watch just about anything. Gymnastics, though, sends her into a hypnotic trance -- at least as much as a hyper five-year-old slide into motionlessness.

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After breakfast, she, K, and the Boy curl up to watch beach volleyball -- not the Girl's favorite, but she still chants "U-S-A!" endlessly.

It's been an inspiring week for her. A week of growth. Rarely does she list "princess" as the first thing she wants to do with her life. Now the list includes gymnast, swimmer, dancer, and artist. Occasionally she adds "princess" to the mix," but so many other things seem so much more interesting.

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But I'm not really worried about that kind of mixing. She'll have enough goal mixing as she grows up. I anticipate at least three different majors during her freshman year, now only thirteen years away. No, it's the little things that thrill me more.

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Things like stabbing a green bean and a piece of chicken onto the lunchtime fork in an effort to kill the bean taste. Or mixing rice and leftover chicken.

Portraits

K heads upstairs with the Boy and the camera. “We haven’t done any portraits in a while,” she says, “and the light is good in the bedroom.

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With a two-month-old, frequent portraits reveal the cumulative daily changes that seem to slip by almost unnoticed.

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Like toenails that need trimming.

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Cleaning

It’s a time of recycling. All the infant toys that have sat in storage for literally years are now out, dumped in the bathroom sink for a good scrubbing before handing them off to the Boy.

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The Girl’s constant refrain — “Can I help?” — receives an enthusiastic “Yes.”

Point of View

The Boy likes his bassinet. He giggles to his bears, squeals when they start swinging, and fusses when they calm down. His cow can hold undivided attention for whole, long stretches. The newest addition — the plastic chain — is of little interest now, but perhaps that will change when his still-shaky emerging hand-eye coordination improves. It does beg to be grasped at.

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Sometimes, something will catch his eye — something outside the bassinet — and he’ll look, seemingly unblinkingly, for several minutes. Other times, he’ll simply lie quietly, looking up at his bears.

Still, it must be something like a prison. Walls on the sides, a covering, and a restricted coordinated movement hamper his ability to look at what he wishes, to explore, to see anything more than bears and faces.

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Friends and Fiends

There’s only one letter difference between them, but perhaps that’s on purpose. At five, best friends can turn into worst enemies and back to bosom buddies again in the space of seconds.

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Yet things can be complicated further, for little brothers cause trouble, and L’s best friend has a little brother.

Little brothers get frustrated with big brothers and their friends do things that purposely irritate or exclude them. They are likely to destroy totally big brother’s blanket tent if big brother doesn’t allow him to join in the fun. Little brothers are for teaching patience and sharing.

So get ready, L.

Thematic

Today the theme was simple and prophetic. Again and again, the Girl performed the simple act that we have been raising her to do, the act we’ve been fearing for her to begin, the act we’re always excited to watch.

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Forward momentum with a temporary moment of uncertainty.

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Knowing and not knowing what the next second holds.

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Having a certain faith that whatever happens next, it will be for the best.

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Going for it.

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Taking risks that might ultimately sink her.

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Today, the Girl jumped, in more senses than one.

Trails

This summer vacation provides me with the first real opportunity in a long time to spend a great deal of daily time with the Girl. As such, I try to do something out of the ordinary with her every chance I get. It’s a good reminder for her of her continued importance in our family despite our shift in attention during the last eight weeks.

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Today, we try a new path at a park fairly new to us. We’d explored the north side of the park’s trails; today, we hit the south side, sounding out signs as we marched.

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It’s an odd trail. To the right we see a lake and accompanying wetlands — a vision of nature’s riches.

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To the left, a view of humanity’s poverty: trailers and virtual shanties. It’s an odd combination, made even stranger by the fact that one of the old homes has a BMW in the driveway. Perhaps a question of priorities: one’s peers don’t have to see one’s house, but one’s car is always on show.

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At the end of our walk, an observation point that juts out into the wetland area made even wetter by the copious rainfall of the last few days.

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We sit for a while, sharing a pack of crackers and sipping on water, careful not to litter (“The wind could blow the plastic away!” someone explains) and commenting on the various blooms reeds.

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During our hike out, with the Girl clasping her hands behind her back, there’s only one thing to do: let her lead.