This is the reason, I
want to say. This right here:
Two girls, in a tennis
lesson. Nervous, because it's the first time. Awful at smacking the
ball, because their mother's never shown them how, because their mother doesn't
know herself. Awkward and unable, but not alone.
Two boys, stuck behind
the fences while they wait the hour out. Rattling the chains, climbing up
two leg lengths before falling down again. Throwing rocks into the
flowers. Playing in the water fountain until both their shirts are wet.
Oh, they fight.
Eighty percent of the time, they fight. They yell words like
"hate" and "mean" and "stupid." They hit
each other, and steal toys - to make the other cry, not to get the toy.
And there are times I want to send them to the four furthest corners of
the house and leave them there in lonely isolation until their father comes
home with a grain more of sense than I have. In hopes that he can end the
screams.
But these times.
These times right here:
A call for partners, and
they already have one.
Mind-boggling boredom,
that they navigate together.
When I was small, my
brothers and sisters were grown. I came behind them by ten years, the
last car on a train that left the station long ago. Of course, they
dragged me about. They fed me and watered me. They yanked me along
on hikes, let me try on their wedding veils, brought me books to disappear
inside, and picked me up from car crashes where I'd smashed some man's blue
truck. They loved me, and I loved them. But I wasn't part of the
screaming and the fights. And I wasn't a part of this.
People stop me in the
grocery store. They deliver smart comments, and count the children up and
down my cart. They mark their ages, and they mark mine. And they
pass judgment on my seeming inability to know that 1+1=yet another 1 more.
Well, this is the
reason, I want to say. This right here.
This part where they get to have each other.
1 comment:
beautiful post. And so much truth! While I fought and yelled at my siblings growing up, they were and still are one of the most precious posessions I "have." And I'm glad that one in particular chose you to be his partner and companion, as I got yet another wonderful sister out of it!
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