I was supposed to be packing for
vacation, but instead stood staring at a collection of plastic stones strewn
across the floor of the upstairs hallway. Occasionally people think that, with
four boys and a stay-at-home dad in the house, my sons might need exposure to
the feminine side of life. They give us “girl toys.” This time it was a handful
of play jewelry: large, fake, gaudy gemstones strung into necklaces and
bracelets. For months, they laid around the house, ignored, until Adam
discovered they made effective flails, and twirling a necklace around his head
like David charging Goliath, chased his brothers from room to room until the
string snapped, the gems flew about, and Adam found other things to do.
Looking
down at the gems scattered around my beloved, self-installed hardwood floors, I
suppressed the urge to unleash upon my children all the frustration built up
while attempting to pack for a week at the beach amidst this circus of life. I
had a rare moment of clarity, and became keenly aware that someday I will look
down at these same floors, likely more scratched abused, and there will be no
toys lying about, no thundering herds to dodge, no kamikaze yells, or cries of
foul play. Someday, probably tomorrow, I will wake up. The house will be empty.
I will be old. I will stand in the silence and feel that hard, yearning ache
for what is no more. I know that. I think that fact lives in the back of my
mind every moment of every day. At the end of this extended fracas, a long
empty quiet awaits. Someday, my sons, you will be gone, and I will miss you.
I will
miss you because my memory is a lazy, half-potent thing. I will remember riding
behind you up the bike path to the park in the warm glow of the evening, every
moment passing in slow motion. I won’t remember that it was the year I finally
committed to my bucket list bicycling event, and had walked in the door after a
fifty-mile training ride to hear, “Daddy, will you take me for a ride too?” I
won’t remember the aching pain in my legs and desperate heaving of my lungs as
I struggled to keep pace with a nine-year old.
I will
remember the cool, breezy afternoon when we read stories on the deck hammock of
the beach house, the pale blue sky streaked with white clouds, reaching down to
the ragged green shrubs that rambled haphazardly over the dunes, highlighted
against the bright pop of the pastel and florescent beach towels hanging to dry
on the rail. I’ll remember the gentle rocking as you crawled onto my stomach,
though you were far too big for such a childish thing, tucked your head into
the crook of my arm, and fell asleep. I will forget my growing, urgent need for
a restroom, the way my hand went numb under your weight, and the purple,
painful, rope-shaped marks, dug deep into my arm when you finally stirred.
I will
remember the afternoons meant for chores, but spent teaching you to play chess;
your chin tucked into your tiny hands, stubby fingers curled in front of your
mouth, brow, too young to furrow, but doing its best as you pondered the puzzle
of your first move. I will forget the tears, the frustration, the awkward
rhythm of play as you made, then reversed, move, after move, after more. I will
forget the piles of unwashed dishes and laundry, the lawn grown long and
ragged, and the tensions in the home created when the necessary was overlooked
to waste away hours on a game you could not yet understand.
I will
remember these things with my hobbled memory, and I will miss you; but not
today. For today I am harried by the truth of life with you, the constant
demands for my attention, the inability to complete a task as simple as shaving
without interruption, the incessant cries of “Daddy!” minute after minute,
requests to meet an unreasonable desire, mediate an unnecessary conflict,
locate a neglected object; and the inevitable “but” greeting every word to
leave my mouth. In fact, I cannot even write these words without part of my
attention tracking you around the room, stopping one of you from sneaking a
treat, another from emptying the tissue container, and the final two from
murdering one another in a dispute over a cheap toy car. Yes, someday I will
stare into your empty rooms and miss you; but not today. Today, in spite of
myself, I cannot wait.
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