When the Petals Drop

“Time is what prevents everything from happening at once.”
~John Archibald Wheeler

When the petals dropMost of the time when it’s my turn to pick up Max from preschool, I admit, I’m running at least a little bit behind. Often, I leave my desktop scattered, but do all I can to ensure the clouds in my mind are clearing by the third red light. My alone time with Max is well earned and I owe it to both of us to make certain I’m able to draw the most from our minutes.

Last week I finished a batch of work early, too late to start something new but just enough time to decompress without rushing my drive. I can almost always use these few extra minutes to decompress, but rarely do I indulge. I parked the car, crossed the lawn, and found myself standing in front of his classroom a full fifteen minutes before pick-up time, all alone amid a surprisingly sudden spring chill.

When I fell to sleep that night, it was with an extra quarter of an hour well worth remembering forever.

Opportunities to observe my children without them knowing are few and far between. I would surrender all I had and slowly pay it back were I offered the chance to nestle inside their heads for a while or more. I was thrilled for a chance that afternoon to be a fly on the wall. Max was in class, back to the window, his teacher pretending not to notice me on the other side of the long pane of glass. The door was closed but the walls were thin, and among the dozen voices singing in a circle, I could clearly hear the one who carried half my DNA.

It was wonderful to see Max as a student without him knowing I was there. He sang, he danced, he took turns. He said thank you, he smiled, he laughed. With just a few minutes to go before the door would swing open and Max would yell, “DADDY!” as he furiously ran into my arms, I realized with the iron weight of the innevitable that it was likely the last time I would ever have the pleasure of seeing him as an unguarded preschooler.

In the fall, Max will start kindergarten and the first chapter of my children’s lives will have finally faded into yesterday.

The sudden certainty was a dull mallet thudding against the soft skin of my slowly beating heart. This summer will bridge the gap between who he was and who he will be. In the fall he will be spending days as his sister has for the last two years, far from our eyes and constantly surrounded by the sights and sounds of a separate life. This is the natural order and all is as it should be, but I still feel it turning in my gut like the aftermath of a rich holiday meal.

The next day, I drove to pick up Mia from school while Max took an afternoon nap. Our family friend Fay just turned six,  so the two of us stopped by her house for a moment to drop off a small gift. We hadn’t been there for a few months, but Mia immediately dropped to the same spot where she’d drawn on the concrete during the last visit, making long arcs of washed out color while I talked to Fay’s dad and grandma, keeping watch from the corner of my eye.

The months have only made her more beautiful. She looked so big there, drawing her name in chalk no different than she did the last time. Her letters a little loopier and her Y a little longer, legs now spilling a little past the edge they merely met before. My thoughts immediately drifted back to Max who seems to have shot up three inches in the last month as the last of the toddler disappeared from his cheeks.

I know I talk about the passing of time an awful lot. It’s one of my most consistent themes, both here and in my most private pages. I can’t help it. My favorite stage of the rose has always been when the blooms are full and the petals are about to drop – the perfume so pungent it permeates the air.

The rose in that moment will never be more striking, it’s scent never richer. The petals drop and all is left to memory.

Writer Dad

Bahma!

“Language is the dress of thought.”

~Samuel Johnson

mail-1Max has never been willing to miss out on the swirling world that fills his eyes. This was never more evident than when he was a two year old toddler, teetering at the lip of fully developed speech. His sister, two years his senior and never without a mouthful of verbiage, would spit sentences with supersonic speed as Max just sat for seconds at at time, eyes wide and mouth open, like a sixteen year old gathering the courage to merge onto the freeway.

And thus, “bahma” was born. The language of children is fascinating.

Anyone my age, give or take a calendar or two, surely remembers the Smurfs. Probably with affection. Though it was fun to watch those little azure mushroom dwellers constantly dodging the danger of Gargamel, it was far more interesting (for me at least) to see the games they played with language.

The word “smurf” –  never before had I seen a single syllable twisted in so many directions. Noun, verb, adjective; homophone, synonym, onomatopoeia. The Smurfs was a show that had a horde of tiny blue men in white pants (alongside one lonely blond created by their arch nemesis) who lived inside magic mushrooms and spent their days gathering smurf berries. Oh, and if you caught seven of them (if memory serves) you could boil them into a bubbling pot of gold.

Weird, sure, but not nearly as cool as the fact that on the Smurfs, this was perfectly acceptable: “Hey Smurfette, would you be a smurf, and fetch me a smurf so I can smurf. I’m feeling smurfed and If I get a smurf, I might be able to smurf a little smurf.” To add a multiple on top of the crazy, the second smurf would casually answer with, “smurf thing, I’ll smurf the smurf in a smurf.”

WHAT?!?

Two and a half decades later, I’m still trying to decide if those writers were the laziest batch of thinkers to ever fritter 22 minutes or whether they held genius unparalleled. My sister and I used to whittle minutes trying to convince one another we had the language totally figured out.

Max would have loved the Smurfs. He used bahma in exactly the same way. This was in the days just before our preschool got started. Daisy and I were tutoring a large passel of fifth graders in our house after school each day, plus he lived in a house with both Mia and myself (both of us who know quiet only as concept), but there was nothing that was going to slow this kid down.

Max was determined, and viewed the constant rattle of language as an open invitation. We had thousands of cards in our deck and Max but a scant few hundred, yet amazingly, our boy treated this handicap as only a hiccup.

“Daddy,” he would ask as a smile made an oval of  his round face, “Why is that bahma always sitting next to the bahma?” Max was able to measure tone against environment to eliminate any question of intention, allowing me to answer without so much as a skipped beat.

“Because Daddy forgot to throw it away,” I would have to admit.

Bahma became a catch-all word, even capable of modifying others. I’ll never forget the day we sat outside as Max gazed into the sky at the whirring blades of a news chopper. “HELLA-DA-BOMBA” he breathed, pointing in wonder.

Leaves fell, bahmas receded, and by Christmas dinner they had been all but abandoned to memory. Still, rarely does a week pass without my mind wandering back to bahma, causing a smile to lengthen my own face.

Bahma!, I think with a mind suddenly thick with melancholic laughter.

Writer Dad

Special thanks to David Wright whose post yesterday about the language of his toddler was all the prompt I needed today.