Thursday, December 29, 2011

Boys and Girls





- For Kylie and Jackson.


  I've got one of each. Fifteen years apart. You don't really notice the differences between boys and girls until you stay with each of them as children for an entire day. The differences are immediately apparent. My boy can dismantle an entire room in minutes where my girl used to take at least a few hours. She liked to watch Barney and Friends. Even when she was a child of one year, I would faithfully rise at five in the morning and sit with her for an hour while she sat mesmerized by a purple dinosaur.  That boy, as a child of one, likes to rise at five AM,  put a pot on his head and run into walls. He likes to get the long stick that screws into the paint roller and swing it around. He immediately makes a beeline for the dirtiest (and clearly the most fascinating) spot in the parking lot and sits in it. Not that my daughter didn't have her moments. I have a vivid memory of chasing her around the living room as she tried to stick a penny into a wall socket. She always called me "Ga Ga." From the very first. She couldn't quite get the "d" sound down, so it came out as "Ga Ga." On those nights when we tried to let her cry herself out, the hardest thing in the world was forcing myself to lie there while she cried, "Ga Ga!" At around the age of two, she climbed out of her crib and fell the three feet to the floor. Three times (Oh, she's fine). The boy is one year old and he's already done it once. I dutifully lowered the mattress and he's fine, but I don't trust him. He will find a way out of that crib.
   I was a lot harder on my daughter. I was a young father, without much patience, and it drove me nuts when she made a mess, or pulled out my vhs tapes (yes, vhs tapes), or threw her fish sticks on the floor.  I regret that now. The boy consistently destroys any sense of order or cleanliness in our house and I can't help but laugh. I wish I had laughed a little more when the girl was his age. I think I denied myself a little of the joy of being a father by being so impatient. I do remember, though, that I did try to appreciate those brief years of her childhood because I knew they would go fast. I used to rock her as a baby on the front porch of our house on sunny afternoons while her mother was at work. I remember thinking, "Right now you're mine. Someday you won't be and the world will have your attention and I won't always be with you but right now, you belong to me."  I would sing her Eagles songs as we rocked. Mostly New Kid in Town and Take It to the Limit. What I would give to have one of those sunny afternoons back. As she got older, we would sing songs together. Uptown Girl by Billy Joel was one of her favorites and we would sing the chorus over and over to see who was best at it. She called me a few weeks ago and said she heard it on the radio and I flashed back to a twenty-something young father and a four year old girl in a car happily singing along with the radio. But I also thought of some things I regret:  how harshly I spoke to her when she spilled a drink in my new car; the birthday I missed because I just couldn't, or wouldn't, take a day off from work. Things that can't be taken back and done over, no matter how many times I've wished they could. My parents bravely stepped in and filled a lot of the gaps left by a divorced, somewhat bewildered young man, but I could have done more. Hopefully I'll do better with the boy. I rock him at night and the same sentence goes through my head: "Right now you're mine. Someday you won't be and the world will have your attention and I won't always be with you but right now you're mine." He has no patience for The Eagles or Billy Joel, though. He gets Jesus Loves Me. I think he'll need it.
   When I'm back in Georgia, I often pass by her old elementary school.  I used to go there during  recess when I was off and play with her and her little classmates. These days, I often drive by that empty playground on my way to her high school. I've never told her, but sometimes I stop for a minute and in my memory still see her as a second grader, arms outstretched, running toward me yelling, "Ga Ga!" Now the world has her attention and I'm not always with her, but I like to remember those days when she was just mine. Like the boy is now.


PS- She's fifteen and she still calls me "Ga Ga."

1 comment:

  1. Darryl!
    Its so good to hear from you! Thank you so much for checking out my blog! I linked to yours right away. I really liked your most recent post. My dad and I have a connection like that with hall and oates. I am actually named after the song Sara. Whenever I hear it i think of him and of being little and how much I love him. I am sure your daughter feels the same.

    Take care!
    Sarah

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