matching tracksuits

fun in threes, sometimes fours

the girl

Saturday Lessons in the Yard

Being a parent means learning to let your kids learn. It's an age-old adage, but some days illustrate it more clearly than others. Or perhaps some days I'm just more aware of it happening around me.

Eight o'clock. The Girl decided she wanted finally to have her yard sale. She'd made the sign long ago, and every weekend, she'd been asking when she could have the sale. This morning, she decided she could wait no longer.

No advertisements on light poles on nearby streets. No cash to make change. Just a girl out in her front yard with some random items for sale: some toys she no longer played with, some books she no longer read, E's old stroller, the bike she's decided is too heavy and we've decided is too difficult for her to ride.

In the end, she sold one thing for one dollar. K and I of course foresaw all of this, but there was no convincing her, and we realized there was really no need even to try: this was a lesson best learned through experience.

More lessons: all one needs to have a rollicking good time for most of the afternoon is an empty cardboard box large enough to fit a seven-year-old and some paints for decoration. One of the neighborhood kids seems more in tune to screens than his own imagination. I found myself wondering what he would have done if he were visiting when W and L pulled out the box and began working. Perhaps he would have found it boring. Perhaps he would have jumped in and tried. The advantage of spending all your time in front of a computer game is that you can do it alone; the advantages of playing in a cardboard box -- more significant. Some of my own students' lack of imagination is simply stunning, so I was pleased to see so much joy coming from something so simple. Pleased, but not too surprised.

Yet another lesson: building a draining system for the newly installed blueberries was surprisingly quick and surprisingly easy. For once a project took me less time than I was expecting.

The Boy learned a thing or two as well. His obsession with trains has been waning, replaced by an obsession with Bob the Builder. Every single time he sees a dump truck or any other piece of heavy equipment, he begins his mantra, based on the Bob the Builder theme song. "Bob the Builder -- can we fix it? Bob the Builder -- yes we can!" For the Boy, though, it's somewhat truncated. "Bob the Builder" becomes "Bob-beaw" while "Yes we can" has mutated to "S-N!"

So as I finished up a little mini-project -- so small it was barely worthy of being called a project except for the fact that I had to head to the lumber store this morning -- I thought I might make him a little training ground. With some effort, managed to squeeze the trigger, so to speak; with a bit more effort, he managed to hold the drill; managing both at the same time was a bit much for a twenty-three-month-old.

And after lost interest in the screws but before he lost interest in the drill, he relearned another lesson. A fall was probably inevitable, and his tears were more from the frustration of falling than anything else. I knelt down to talk to him -- the typical dad "shake it off, big man" type thing -- and I realized I was still holding the camera. Click. (Well, not so much a click with a digital camera, and with shutterless digital cameras now emerging it will soon be silent, but I can't think of a proper onomatopoeic word to describe the sound of the D300's shutter sliding open and snapping shut.)

"Why would I take a picture of my son in tears?" I thought. And tonight, going through the pictures, I learned the next lesson of the day: it's a fragment of our daily reality, the tears of a toddler. Something I'll forget as it morphs into the tantrums that will continue from now until age thirty. Or forty-one in my case.

The final lesson of the day: K and I can get so much more done when Nana and Papa spend the afternoon with us, helping out with the kids, helping out with this or that aspect of planting Asiatic jasmine or sealing a poor construction. The list of accomplishments today is impressive, but more significant, the learning.

Spring Tuesday Afternoon

Everything is finally waking up. Almost all of the raspberry canes now have leaves on them, and buds are poking out of our single blackberry cane. The irises are resurrecting themselves, and the grass has turned a dark green.

VIV_4354

"It's about time!" is just about what all of us would say. I'm not sure I recall being so glad to see winter go in years. The winter months in South Carolina are usually so very mild that I feel we really haven't had a winter at all, but this year, there's no doubting it: we had winter. And it hung on for a while. And kept coming back even after we thought it was gone.

VIV_4355

With the arrival of spring, though, come new chores, chief among them watering our new blueberry bushes, six here, six there.

VIV_4363

In typical fashion, the Boy watches and then quickly imitates. It's as if he's constantly thinking, "Oh, so that's how you do it. I'll have to give that a try." He remembers details from previous days, little touches that I'm surprised an almost-two-year-old sees.

VIV_4368

Some of it has been simply funny. A few times I gave him his bottle when he was younger, I held it as if I were a sommelier at some fine restaurant; he soon began doing his best imitation just before lifting the bottle to his mouth.

VIV_4376

Yesterday, he watched me try to jump-start K's car. "Try" only because the battery was too dead and my small, thin cables didn't have the capacity to deliver that amount of power -- too much lost in route due to the inefficiencies inherent in current.

VIV_4422

And so when he finds the jumper cables sitting out, he does the logical thing: he tries to attach them to his toy fire truck.

VIV_4378

The Girl has her own concerns, though, like a budding reading obsession, that leads her to stumble and fall as she walks and reads. Or was that just the dramatic, theatrical part of her personality, pretending?

"She did that on purpose," K laughs as I snap pictures. Still, the end result is amusing, even if faked.

VIV_4390

Later, in the hammock, she reads aloud to me. She stumbles over a few words, proper names mainly, like Ester, but by and large, I just sit and listen.

VIV_4439

Words like "gracefully" gracefully fall from her mouth as if she's merely telling the story herself, from memory, with the inflections and drama of a professional storyteller. Well, almost.

VIV_4455

Hammock

We got a hammock the other day. Not really sure why. L wanted it; K thought it was a fun idea. So now we have one.

VIV_4295

Which thrills L to no end. The Boy is less sure of it, but he might warm up to it.

VIV_4304

The Girl’s hair definitely gives it a thumbs up, to mix metaphors.

Morning, Evening

Sun comes up, it's Saturday morning, and the gray sky suggests that we won't be doing much more than sitting at home -- as if gray skies mean such a thing. Just because we're rained in doesn't mean that we can't find work to do. Two kids, a house, one parent a teacher -- there's always something to do, something to fix, something to begin, something to complete.

VIV_4166

I make the coffee and think of a song, an album I hadn't listened to in ages. Cowboy Junkies. Somehow the perfect group for this morning. Calm, somewhat monotonous, almost boring in the perfect way something could be boring.

The kids and I get ready to go out shopping -- a quick trip that serves two purposes. We get the things we need, like sundried tomatoes for the coming week's salads, and we leave K alone in the house to clean.

"I like it. It's calming, almost a meditation."

Must be a Polish thing.

BW0_4163

We arrive home, entertain the kids, force some Polish down L's gullet -- those Polish lessons are getting harder and harder, K swears -- and eat some lunch, and then the sun comes out. Followed by me. I have ten cubic yards of dirt to compact at the end of the driveway to prepare our latest blueberry patch. And a yard to mow. And a million other things that I can't quite get to. The Girl goes to a friend's house to play, then brings him back to play some more. K brings the fed and napped Boy outside while she cleans the van we'll soon be selling -- hopefully -- and suddenly it's evening. I stand at the grill, turn the chicken, turn the corn, and watch the sun on buds in the tree tops turn golden as Nana and Papa entertain the kids and vice versa.

Eight fifteen. "What do you say I go upstairs and draw the bath?" I whisper in K's ear as she finishes up dinner dishes.

"Sounds good."

And tonight, all dive in.

BW0_4168

All. Including our brave, curious, playful kitten.

VIV_4186

Much to everyone's delight.

VIV_4192

Soon enough, kids are out, and I'm making the Boy's bottle, then playing guitar for him as he drifts off to sleep. I sit on the bed, then lie on the bed, suddenly to be awakened.

"Who fell asleep first?" K laughs.

Hard to tell.

"Movie?"

"Are you kidding?"

Not really, but I know that there's not much point even starting it. She'll fall asleep within the first half hour, and by then, I might be interested enough not to want to stop.

"You're probably right," I say.

"Coming to bed?"

"No, I've got one more thing to do."

Dancing

Stretching into the Future

It was time for the Girl to go to bed; it was time for Elsa to play. These two events cannot happen simultaneously: several nights, L has come downstairs, kitten in hand, tearfully explaining that “Elsa is jumping on me and biting on me and won’t let me sleep!” Taking all that into consideration, I explained to L that she would have to go to bed without Elsa, which brought on panicked hysteria. “I can’t sleep without Elsa!” I calmed her down, explaining that I would bring the kitten up to her room once she had tired herself out.

For an hour, the cat played with a green bean that had fallen when K was cooking for tomorrow night.

As promised, I took the cat back up to L’s room, nestling her into the crook of L’s neck. And as I walked out, I, the pessimist, the cynic that I am, had the most macabre thought: If they’re this close now, if L is this attached so quickly, what will it be like when Elsa dies? I pictured a teenager, perhaps nearing the end of her high school adventures. Maybe it would happen around prom time, devastating the Girl and running her prom. Silly thoughts, but I mentioned them to K.

“Well, if Elsa dies a natural death, L will be an adult then.”

I’d forgotten L is already seven years old. I’d forgotten how long cats can live. Or more precisely, I’d forgotten that things won’t always be as they are now. That’s why the passage of time catches us so unexpectedly. The changes creep by, day by day, and we think it’s always been as it is. E has always been just on the verge of talking. The Girl has always been able to read, stumbling over only the most troubling words. Except all those always’s can’t always be, not even for a moment. But oh how we sometimes want them to…

Random Monday Thoughts

He toddled to the wood pile, on which rests the small box of sidewalk chalk, and tried to climb.

"Do you want chalk?" I asked.

"Taaaaaaaaaak!" he affirmed.

He took the chalk, bounced over to his ride-able toy firetruck, which has a small storage compartment, opened said compartment, and dropped the chalk in. He pushed it out of the carport then up half of the driveway, where he stopped and emptied his cargo onto the pavement. Taking the fat cylinder of chalk in his hand, he scratched enthusiastically at the pavement, just as L had done so many years ago.

Having multiple children is a constant reminder of the cyclical nature of almost all we do. E is now fascinated with chalk for drawing on the driveway -- large, fat chalk that leaves pink and red and blue marks on the black pavement.

"Koło!" he cried as he made yet another circle.

Paris Mountain

“Tata, when are we going to have another Tata-L day?” the Girl occasionally asks. It's our nickname for a little bit of time together, just the two of us. It might be a bit of bike riding together, or it might just be a few errands with a milkshake treat to finish up the outing. Until recently, though, the Boy has really been too small for a Tata-E day.

Today was just such a day

The girls were on their way to the airport for Babcia's return flight, with a planned stop at Ikea to begin planning a room renovation for the Girl's bedroom. It was the perfect opportunity for a bit of little-man-alone-with-Tata time: walking, climbing, falling, looking, exploring.

Posed
Calling to the geese
Posed
Over the bridge -- again, and again, and again.
Passable roots
Walking the trail with excitement
Beaver tracks
Examining
Step one
Step two
Step three
Walking carefully so as not to fall through

Afternoon Play

Morning Nap

BW0_3942