Airplanes

I’ve only been away for two days but when I look through the 2nd-floor window and see him waiting downstairs in the arrivals area I wave furiously. He waves back, smiling big.

As I come through the sliding doors, he runs towards me. It’s the classic airport scene – mom coming home, her little boy running to greet her, big smiles all around.

He jumps at me and I scoop him up, aware of the others still waiting for their loved ones who are smiling as they watch us. The big reunion.

“Mama!” he says excitedly.

“Hi, buddy!” I answer, thinking about how lucky I am to have a little man who’s so happy to see me come home.

“Come and get me a new airplane!”

Little bugger. It’s less that he’s happy to see me, though I know he is, and more that he found a toy airplane when we were here to drop me off and he hasn’t forgotten. Figures mom coming home is a good opportunity to bargain for it again.

I laugh and agree to go with him so he can show me.

“I want a kiss first, though,” I say.

I get one.

5 Minutes to Yes

July 21, 2007.

Running. Running so fast I almost want to laugh but I’m afraid if I do I’ll have to stop running and I don’t want to miss this plane.

Signs in German are flashing past over my head. I don’t register what they say – I’m just following numbers looking for 36N – but the fact that they’re there registers somewhere deep in my consciousness, pulling up old memories.

Your dad is running with me, darting around families and business people and little old ladies, all of whom are taking way too long to meander towards their gates, secure in the knowledge that they’re not about to miss their flight. I catch a glimpse of him, running fast but delicately, the way he does, springing off his toes as though this wasn’t a sprint. I know he probably wants to body check some of these slow people, but he’s way too polite for that.

I don’t know where your Farmor is – she’s gone on ahead, driven in a much more stately manner in one of those golf cart things that’s blessed with a horn to move the herds of travellers when someone needs to get somewhere fast. There wasn’t room for us, but I prefer the run.

I’ve been in lots of airports in my time. Lots? Enough. I’ve been fortunate with travel, confidently encouraged by your Grandma to go places I wasn’t sure I was brave enough to go. Now, running through the Frankfurt airport, the memory that’s stirring is of the first time I was here, as a shy, scared 15-year-old about to embark upon an adventure. I want you to know this feeling I have now. This knowing that it’s scary, yes. And exciting and overwhelming and life changing. To get to spend time in another country, another culture, is a gift. I’ve done it as an exchange student – here in Germany for four months, without my family, without all that’s familiar to me, without even really knowing the language – leaving me with the knowledge that I can do it. I’ve done it as a backpacker – on my own, and with others. With your dad. I’ve done it as a tourist. I’ve done it as a professional who has occasionally had to pretend that getting up and talking in front of a whole bunch of people I don’t know, who have years more experience than I do, is a piece of cake. Having done it, I know those experiences are what make me who I am. Having done it, I will always choose to do it again. I will always choose yes.

But for now I’m running. The lights overhead are bright and the airport is busy. It’s full of the sounds of people – people talking, people laughing, people rolling wheeled suitcases down laminated halls. But I don’t really hear these things. I hear your dad’s footsteps beside me. I hear my own heart pounding in my chest. I hear, occasionally, an airport announcement and I listen more closely to see if they’re calling our names.

It has seemed like ages, but it’s really just a matter of minutes and we’re there. Farmor is there and we’ve made it, with some time to spare even. And right next to our gate is a book shop. Right out front is a display featuring the latest – the last – Harry Potter book, which has just come out today. Your dad doesn’t hesitate – walks right into the shop and buys a copy.

I wish I could share this feeling with you. This feeling I have here, now, in this scene – the trip to Sweden to see family, the run through a familiar-and-yet-not airport where I first found my wandering spirit, the last-minute dash to buy a book we both can’t wait to savour. It’s a scene bursting with things that make life so beautiful and things I hope life will offer you. And when the offers come, I hope you will choose yes.

 

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This post is in response to a new series of memoir prompts at The Red Dress Club:

For this week, we want you to imagine that after you have died and your daughter/son will be given the gift of seeing a single five-minute period of your life through your eyes, feeling and experiencing those moments as you did when they occurred. What five minutes would you have him/her see? Tell us about them in the finest detail. Maximum word count: 700 words.


 

Valentines

In the eyes of the boy, I am everything. I know everything. Can do everything (except build snowmen). My kisses heal wounds. My breath in the night scares away the darkness. My hugs bring him home.

I carried him then, gave him life. Nourished his body with mine. Carry him still.

To me he can say, “I love you, too” even when I haven’t said it first, because sometimes love is unspoken.

In the eyes of the boy I am perfect.

In the eyes of the man, I am the other half. The other half of one whole.

I offer what I can and he takes it, adds to it and makes it more.

If I need help I can ask for it and he gives it. Sometimes I can’t ask for it and he gives it anyway.

I have said, “I’m sorry.” And he has said, “There are no conditions.”

In the eyes of the man I am perfect in my imperfection.

To me, the boy is life and light and lilting laughter. He is me and he is the man: he is the poignancy of potential. He’s also his own person and don’t you dare mess with that.

He is perfect.

To me, the man is the source of much of the best of the boy. He is more – much more – than I knew when I met him. He is my patience and my strength. He is rational when I’m not. He laughs when I can’t.

He is love, and love is perfect.

I’m lucky to have them, these two. My two.

Valentines.

Wordless Wednesday: Swing

Last night, I admitted something.

This morning, the sun is shining.

I’m reminded of the first time we put Connor in a swing. He loved it.

Connor-swing

Happy.

Small Comfort

Early morning. Any given day.

It’s dark and the house is quiet, except for the one small boy who’s stirring. No, not stirring. Leaping. Leaping into being awake.

I manage to hold him off enough that I can stay in a state of being half asleep just a little longer, but soon he’s had enough.

“It’s time to go downstairs.”

I peel myself off the bed and we go.

Once released from the bedroom, he gets quiet again. In the early morning, he sits on the couch with his milk and watches TV. I sit at the table and eat cereal while hopping from site to site to app on my computer – my own way of waking up to the world. (When did I stop reading the newspaper? I can’t remember.)

Eventually, inevitably, a small voice floats over from the couch.

“Come sit over here.”

I join him on the couch. He shares the blanket and finds a spot for his toes somewhere underneath me where they will be warm. To an outsider, he would appear to have settled in nicely. But I’m his mom. I know he’s not there yet. There’s one more thing.

“I need your arm.”

(When he was really small, it was necks. He’d sit on my lap and lean his small head into me and tuck it under my chin. He’d reach up and touch my neck. It was his comfort thing. He still does that to my husband, but for some reason he’s moved on to my arm.)

He takes my hand, turns it over, and then runs his small fingers over the tendons on the inside of my wrist, feeling the bumps. He does this absentmindedly, and if I move he pulls my arm back.

Looking at him, I can see he’s somewhere else. If I talk to him, he doesn’t really hear. But if I move, he notices.

It’s funny what comforts small children.

“Come sit over here… I need your arm.”

The milk’s not enough. The blanket’s not enough. Whatever the show of the day is, it’s not enough.

I guess sometimes you just need your mama.