Tonight, after a busy day and a busy weekend, Tyler lay in bed clad in Batman pyjamas swinging his legs back and forth. "I'm not tired Daddy--I have so much energy I could jump from my bed all the way up to the moon!"
Jennifer and I had spent most of the weekend outside with Tyler, watching with giddy, childish excitement on Saturday as he attempted a tall wobbly ladder-obstacle-course-thingy over and over again until he could do it; scootering to church on Sunday, then running and playing soccer in the backyard, then jumping on the tiny trampoline that our lovely neighbors gave us, then playing with various Imaginary People, then convincing various Imaginary People that it was, indeed, time to eat dinner, then convincing various Imaginary People that it was, indeed, time to take a bath, then convincing various Imaginary People that it was, indeed, time to go to bed.
The thing about Imaginary People is that they are incredibly useful allies in the journey to Try and Get Children To Do What You Want Them To Do.
Our two favorite Imaginary people are Mr. McGooga and Lucy. Mr. McGoogal is a 70-year old man who walks around with a duck on his head. (The duck can never be removed, even when he goes to sleep or takes a bath.) Mr. McGoogal always does things in an opposite or highly strange manner: he wakes up at night and goes to bed when the sun rises; he brushes his teeth with mud; he walks around naked outside and then puts on all his clothes for bath time; he eats dessert first and dinner second; he picks his nose and his butt (often simultaneously); he inevitably goes the wrong way when attempting to go anywhere.
Our other favorite Imaginary People Person is Lucy--who is almost two years old and cries often, always wants her own way, and consistently doesn't know what to do (other than knowing that she doesn;t want to do what her Mommy and Daddy think she should do).
Tyler often needs to correct what Mr. McGoogal does, or explain to Lucy why doing something she wants to do isn't necessarily the right thing to do at the moment. When tired, Lucy and Mr. McGoogal begin to sound an awful lot like one another--but when awake, they are so good at what they do (imaginarily) that they often make very real changes in Tyler's decisions.
(Sometimes.)
Because at other times, even Imaginary People (no matter if they have ducks on their heads) can't even convince a four-year old that he should go to sleep.
Other times like, say, tonight.
While jumping to the moon did sound like a lot of fun, doing so would have caused an inevitable extra half-hour (including blast-off and then landing, plus the blast-off and landing back on Earth), and Tyler had already woken up early this morning. Jennifer and he had drawn endless pictures of beautiful things, I had done the paper route, and even thought the grumps made a few appearances, Jen and I gave one another that wordless, knowing parental look which said quite loudly: Early bedtime tonight?
Yes.
Yes.
Except, as Tyler lay in bed swishing his legs back and forth, attempting to start an uncanny amount of new option for what could be done instead of sleeping, even the star-studded prowess of Mr. McGoogal and Lucy could not be of aid.
And tonight those immortal, bold, four-year-old-mastered words came crashing all around me like a layer of bricks covered with sawdust that had been previously coated in a thick layer of mud which may, possibly, have had traces of dog poop mixed in. On the edge of exhaustion, and bereft of any real hope from Imaginary People.
"I'm not tired!"
I'm not tired!
I'm not tired!
So I did what any patient, kind, warm, loving, gentle, endlessly hopeful father would do. I pretended to be asleep.
"Daddy, did you hear me? I said, I'm not tired."
More pretending to be asleep. And I threw in a big yawn with my eyes closed tight because, hey, I was that sleepy.
Tyler stopped talking to me, then began swishing his legs louder and faster and louder and faster and--
Singing. We've got singing. Loud singing, with more leg swishing, back and forth and back and forth, and then the singing and the leg swishing began to work in unison, forming an even more imposing wall of Mud/Poop-Coated-Bricks that were crashing, crashing, crashing all around me and the singing and swishing and is he veer going to fall asleep because he REALLY needs it because he is SO OVERTIRED and what's with even the IMAGINARY PEOPLE not even working!!!???
And as I continued to pretend to be asleep, a decrescendo occurred. A glorious, melodious decrescendo. And then, a small bit of quiet, and then two beautiful words: "I'm not..."
And that caesura--that beautiful poetic silence--cause me to wake wide up from my pretend sleep and look full at Tyler's face. There my boy lay, peacefully sleeping like the overtired, exhausted child that he was.
And it dawned on me in that moment that Imaginary People are amazing. They're beautiful and helpful and downright giddy fun. But reality is also pretty great, too. Because a lot of us adults aren't much different than four-year olds--swishing our legs back and forth, trying to convince ourselves that we're not tired, not sad, not in need of help, not in need of love, or a kind word, or hope, or just a little bit of truth.
It's hard to admit stuff. It's scary and we're afraid that we'll miss out on good things if we admit the truth. If we're sad, we wonder if it means we made the wrong choice. If we endure failure and suffering, we fear others will tell us we walked into it ourselves. If we travel through confusion, we worry others will direct our steps rather than simply love us through the unclear trail.
So we say things. We say, I'm not sad or I'm not tired or I'm not battling some pretty severe heartache or I'm not depressed or I'm not scared.
But the thing is, we are. The fact that we're members of the human family essentially guarantees that we're all of these things sometimes (hopefully not all simultaneously, though, because that would even freak out Mr. McGoogal).
But once in a while, we find a space where we can let a caesura slip into our exteriors. We find that place or those people with whom we can pause just long enough to allow the silence to create a space authenticity and love have a chance to breathe. Sometimes, we find ourselves saying just two words: I'm not...
And we pause, because we know we are. And knowing we are gives others the chance to hold our hands, fix their eyes, and respond with love. Maybe then we stop all our nervous leg swishing and fall into a deep sleep. And when we wake, the world looks new again.
One Writer's Journey Through Parenting, Teaching, Writing, Faith, and Social Justice. A.E. Housman once claimed that "poetry is not the thing said, but a way of saying it." These are my attempts at a way of saying it. Too often, we erect walls where a few stoplights would do the trick. Consider these posts stoplights along the way.
Showing posts with label Vulnerability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vulnerability. Show all posts
Monday, April 29, 2013
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
One True Thing from Jennifer Reynolds: You Are Enough
Okay, the truth: Jennifer Reynolds is about the most awesome person I've ever met in my entire life. She's my best friend. She's deeply committed to social justice. She can research some of the most harrowing details of human trafficking, and yet still manages to wake up every day and believe in hope, in love, in faith, and in fighting for a better world. Jennifer is the kind of person who dances with her four-year old son in the ancient ruins of Barnard Castle in the Yorkshire Dales. Jennifer is the kind of person who whip up an original, incredibly tasty soup from scratch. Jennifer is the kind of person who brings a book like The Sunflower Sword to life. And Jennifer is the kind of person whose pilgrim soul is ever on thew lookout for new possibilities, new ways of growing and changing both herself and the world around her. So I am beyond honored and excited and over the moon to have my wife share her One True Thing today.
You Are Enough
By Jennifer Reynolds
When Luke asked me to write my thoughts for “One True Thing”
I laughed: not because I thought he was joking, not because I didn't want to,
and not because I don’t know any true things. I laughed because it made me
nervous to narrow down my thoughts and construct something interesting and original
(especially within the “paragraph or two” suggested length!). But there was
also something else, and it was a subtle sense that anything I came up with
could never be just right or worthy of posting “out there”. It’s a battle I
have faced for a long time, and it is one that I believe is shared by many
others. It is a battle I have tried to put to words and have often come up
short. You see, I love to write, to
create, to research and to engage with social justice issues. And yet, it is
when I am actually trying to pursue these ventures that make my little heart
beat so fast that I feel most inadequate. It has left me puzzled time and time
again.
So where does this leave me with sharing “one true thing”? Recently,
I watched Dr. Brene Brown’s TED talks on vulnerability
and shame,
and felt something click. As she eloquently suggests in these lectures, there
is power in imperfection and letting go of control. There is power in
retraining our minds to think more about our passions, our gifts, and the
blessings all around us rather than what other people think about our actions and
decisions. There is power in recognizing that who we are is a gift in itself,
and it is not egotistical, arrogant or self-centered to love ourselves (which
is not the same thing as putting
ourselves on a pedestal above others; rather, it is
treating ourselves with kindness, compassion, patience and grace). This is
essential if we ever hope to fully love others. And it starts with seeing and
believing one true thing: I am enough. You are enough. We are all worthy of
love and belonging…just as we are.
(For a brief talk from Dr. Brown on her book, The Gifts of Imperfection, see this clip
which was featured on PBS: http://www.pbs.org/about/news/archive/2011/pbs-living-courage/)
Monday, March 5, 2012
Rambo, Atticus, and Raskolnikov
In the March/April issue of the Believer magazine, I wrote a review of the Rambo IV tagline: "Heroes don't die...they just reload." Ever since I first saw the movie poster--four years ago now--that tagline has haunted me as a dangerous message of what media tells men: act tough, be invulnerable, hide who you really are.
Here's a link to the full essay at the Believer's site.
Here's a link to the full essay at the Believer's site.
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