Tucker is sulking. He wants to ride bikes with friends. He wants more screen time. He does not want to unload the dishwasher. Maybe he's hungry. He surveys the pantry, sighs, scowls.
Three minutes later he's reading a book. Interrupted by the dryer signal, he smiles and comments on the cute little song at the end of a cycle, kind of celebratory, he decides.
We aim to allow for rich emotional range at home, while maintaining rigorous standards about tone and behavior. The combination of quarantine plus mixed up sentiment can make a person feel stuck, and we've all been challenged by the occasional mood.
Andy and I skipped our annual anniversary lunch at Lindey's last week, for the first time in eighteen years. Even patio dining, which is what we've always done anyway, felt like an unnecessary risk.
We visited a nature preserve instead, took the boys, who would've ordinarily been with grandparents for the day, on a hike. The years start coming and they don't stop coming, even in lockdown.
Hank has been talking about everything he will do when he is five. Remind me when the next March comes, he says. Age four seems to suit him fine now though, full of rainbows and sparkles, a perennial red carpet unfurling in his path. He recently discovered the perfume inserts in O magazine, and his heart is full of every color, he tells us.
Tolliver goes from clicking the old WWII location cricket to knapping flint, from sorting arrowheads to browsing remote controlled planes on ebay. Do pandemics spark avidity?
He also goes from mourning the loss of small summer rituals to the grand narrative of Maybe things are actually better this way.
I climb in bed to find both fake poop on my pillow and a fart noise machine under it. I will fall asleep having met my goals for the day - eat something green, see the sun, do not commit murder. Tomorrow we will catch snakes and launch rockets and wade through creeks and eat cake, glad for every day that keeps coming.
You have readers, thinkers, makers, musicians, athletes, magicians, tricksters, eaters -- brothers, who are frequently purveyors of kindness and originality. These days my moods change as often as the sun sets on the planet where the Little Prince battles his baobabs... and I'm guessing it's times 5 at your house.
ReplyDeleteCan you rig the dryer to play its happy little tune every hour on the hour? (Or is that already the normal laundry schedule!?!)