Learning to fly

Posted on | October 16, 2009 | 8 Comments

We make paper airplanes. A fleet of them tossed into space after dinner, twirling, looping, landing on the hardwood, on the couch cushions, on the edges of ledges and windowsills. Our hearts on our sleeves, laughter filling the living room, as the cold autumn night crowds in around at the windows and Sprout chases after each one, newly crawling, hands going fwap, fwap, fwap across the floor. This is my life, I think. These boys, these moments. What does it matter that I’ve missed a deadline I wanted to meet, or that tiredness makes me stupid some mornings? Everything that really matters is in this room tonight.

“Here, I’ll show you how fold one,” I say to Bean, not really believing that he’ll be able to follow my lead, and remembering second graders I’ve taught who have burst into tears with frustration, not able to follow the same sequence of folds.

“Really?” he grins. Then he sits on the floor with a stack of paper, his legs folded behind him on the floor like a little frog.

He watches intently, copying every fold.

First a rectangle, then the nose folded in to make opposing triangles, then the whole thing in half, then the wings folded down. Symmetry and sequence matter now. He breath is shallow, intent.

“Let me try it again,” he says after we toss our new planes high and watch them land. Sprout squeals in delight. A candle still flickers on the dinner table. Night is here, making the window glass into mirrors that catch our grins.

I watch him as he makes another, all himself. The entire sequence of steps folded from memory, after only being shown twice. And his plane flies beautifully. It lifts improbably, air pushing up under the flimsy paper and carrying it up to the ceiling before it swoops down, twirling in arbitrary circles before landing at his feet.

His grin is bigger than the room.

My grin is bigger than the room.

OCTOBER-1

This boy, this beautiful boy of mine, teaches me so much. He challenges me at every turn to grow, to become more organized, more intentional, more prepared. He is my mirror, revealing the fragile and haphazard parts of my being that dangle and drag like dropped stitches. Where I am weakest, this is where parenting him forces me to grow the most.

I can’t coast, parenting him. He never gives me the chance to sit back on my laurels and get comfy. He questions everything. He is always pushing me to the edge of my comfort zone. He’s a kid who seems porous to me: the entire environment saturates his little being. He soaks everything up. Watches everything. Asks about everything.

He sees a thing once, and remembers it, classifying it with other similar things: the makes of cars, the inner workings of tractors, street signs, logos, maps. He has a particular obsession with learning new words and he insists on using them again and again until they blend into his daily vocabulary. Words like scenery and astounding, and investigate.

He is never content with the simple answer. He is always full force, full throttle, determined. He is fragile. He is allergic (to dust, grass, pollen, pets.) He is picky. He is persistent. He is easily overwhelmed by sensory stimulation. He exhausts me.

And I’m starting to get it: this boy of mine might be one of the most profound teacher’s I’ll ever know.

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8 Responses to “Learning to fly”

  1. Megsie
    October 16th, 2009 @ 1:51 pm

    Spoken like a true teacher. Not everybody is aware of how children teach us. Bean sounds like such a wonderful boy, and you a wonderful mother to him. My oldest and my youngest are my teachers. They are sensitive and strong all in the same moment. I have to temper my response constantly. Check and recheck. They amaze me, as does my middle daughter…because she makes sense to me. She is so easy to parent. It is an incredible web, this parenting thing. One strand affects the whole, and no matter how strong it is still so very fragile.

  2. tara pollard pakosta
    October 16th, 2009 @ 2:05 pm

    Your boy sounds AMAZING!!!
    Keep teaching him the new words
    and answering those questions!
    He will do great things with his life!
    Of that, I am sure!
    This post is just so PERFECT! true & real.
    LOVE iT!
    you are doing a great job with your boys!
    tara

  3. Christina
    October 16th, 2009 @ 2:06 pm

    ‘Tis true… the teacher becomes the student with these wee tots and back again. I find it is very fluid and I suppose that is what helps make us humans unique amongst many and sundry other things.

  4. lizardek
    October 16th, 2009 @ 5:02 pm

    It’s a never-ending learning process for us, isn’t it. This was so beautifully written, Christina. Really, truly, perfect.

  5. Bethany
    October 16th, 2009 @ 6:52 pm

    “He is my mirror, revealing the fragile and haphazard parts of my being that dangle and drag like dropped stitches.”

    That is so much how I feel with my older daughter. She seems to have inherited all the characteristics I least like about myself, and that in itself teaches me patience… and forgiveness… and grace, over again every day. It’s a good thing. Difficult and good.

  6. pixie
    October 20th, 2009 @ 1:15 am

    So true and so beautiful. Look at those proud and vivid eyes!

  7. Lauren
    October 20th, 2009 @ 4:24 am

    beautiful post! I love the lines about your grins. :)

  8. Tammy
    October 21st, 2009 @ 6:59 pm

    Mmmm… wise, wise words. As always, you articulate so well this journey called motherhood.

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  • I am Christina Rosalie

    Hello. I'm so happy you've stopped by!

    I am a multimedia storyteller, digital strategist, idea starter, stalker of wonder, finder of four leaf clovers, MFA graduate student, and mama of boys. My first book,

    will be published by SKIRT! Books in September, 2012.

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