Damon is my second child. He is a little boy, and he just turned one on February 2nd. We celebrated Damon last weekend while Mom was here- both his baptism and his first birthday.
I was raised in a church that mostly baptizes infants when they're still tiny, red and wrinkled. Jack certainly was, doused with water and anointed with oil at three weeks old. For Damon, I put it off for a handful of reasons. For one, about the time I was ready to schedule a baptism for him, at about 2 months old, an ugly rash suddenly spread across his cheeks. I (vainly) thought, I'd rather clear up his skin before we stand up in front of a church full of people.
Little did I know how long that would take, and what it would involve (that's another story). 11 months later and his pale little cheeks are finally, reliably soft and clear. I cherish that little baby, but there is a lot more...gravity in our lives that accompanies being his parents.
I remember planning Jack's first birthday party. There was a buoyancy about it, like the bouquet of brightly colored balloons we bought for the celebration. We frenetically planned a guest list and a menu, racing around, bickering in our way about how it was all going to be completed (and paid for), all to say to our small world, our wonderful, perfect baby Jack is one year old! It was a party- friends, warm weather, food, photos, streamers, and those wonderful balloons- you'd hold the long ribbons of the bunch of them in your fist, and they would gently tug upwards, like having a fish on the line in the water. The wonder and happiness of having Jack floated above it all, above the buzzing around of our inexpert entertaining.
It was joyful. We drank champagne and ate quiche, and tried to get Jack to eat his birthday cake before he got too sleepy from a skipped morning nap. Guests came and went from our sun-drenched little rented townhouse like birds circling a chirpy little nest. It was shortly after Jack's birthday that I learned I was pregnant again.
This brings us back to Damon, born about 20 months after Jack. The day we baptized him was the only real fair-weather day the whole week Mom was here. We had beautiful sunshine that cast a pale warmth over the wet city. I ended up dressing Jack and Damon in matching, navy blue fleece pea coats and light-colored linen pants. Damon's white pants had been Jack's, and Jack's had turned up in a bag of handed-down clothing from any one of our friends and acquaintances (all through church) with a boy or two older than ours. Their older half-sister, Emmy, showed up with her dad wearing a fancy dress, black tights, and her wheat-colored hair in lovely, loose curls. Dennis wore the dark suit we bought him for our wedding, and the light blue tie from being a groomsman in his brother Steve's wedding, which was the same week as ours.
Damon was baptized in a room of red, white and gold: when I will look back in memory, I will see the white walls and arched ceiling of the sanctuary, with its tall, mullioned window panes of frosted glass and matching, arched and hinged white shutters, folded up like great birds' wings; the carpet is scarlet, a little worn but still very formal-looking. The white baptismal font opens to reveal a brilliant gold plate full of water, the flickering movement of which fascinated both boys. I passed Damon to the pastor, his legs held out stiffly in front of him during the hand-off. Our pastor cupped one big hand full of water, splashing over Damon's fuzzy head and pausing there reassuringly after each splash for the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Damon didn't make a noise, just looked at that gold pool of water with eyes wide and curious as it dripped down his face and neck.
The rite of baptism doesn't last long, but feels to me dense with meaning- the dark green hymnal in my hand, the unison voice of the prayer and response of the congregation that surrounds us in community, the choir gathered in the balcony to the right of pipe organ, all in that light-filled room. As our other pastor introduced the service (he spoke on Paul), Damon looked up into that balcony, and with a sharp, far-sighted eagle gaze in his light blue eyes, called out to someone with recognition. This is likely really what happened, I'm telling you- Damon spends a lot of time up in that balcony with me, the choir, and that powerful organ.
So, that was the baptism of Damon Michael, at almost thirteen months- not quite talking, not quite walking, but very, very alert.
We spent a lot of time, care and love this past year, Damon's first year, identifying and diagnosing his health challenges- all of the chronic, allergic and respiratory type (again, another story). As self-employed and part-time employed musicians and music teachers, we haven't been actively participating in the economy for very long, so to speak, so this process has carried its own weight of concern making decisions about how to get Damon the health care he needs. Sometimes it's not as simple as just taking your child to the doctor. It also wasn't a simple matter of identification and treatment. These things sometimes reveal themselves slowly, and episodically. You react, make a change, treat a flare-up, and wait to see what happens as they get incrementally older, day by day.
I guess, in light of all of that, and with the illness of a good friend, we kept Damon's party small. But I wanted to celebrate him in spite of how worry-fraught his first year sometimes got. A close friend offered up her house in the South of the city, and in her congenial kitchen and dining room, with a few friends, we toasted Damon's sweet little face, his goofy ears, his mild nature. Dennis made an array of very hypoallergenic foods, including vegetarian sushi and cupcakes notable for all the ingredients they don't contain- my husband's own recipe. We drank tea and strong coffee, and wine.
For me, the whole party, the vividness of my love for my small children, family, and our life together, it has this chiaroscuro of sadness throughout. It reminds me of a trip I recently took- overnight to a conference for choral music in Atlanta, a half-day's drive from home. It was in a beautiful, sprawling Protestant church, and that night, there was a candle-lit Taize religious service. This trip was the first time I'd left Damon overnight, and to do so took a great deal of preparation and logistical planning (yet another story).
Raising your voice to God is at the heart of Taize services, and in a minimalist style, as the melody repeats over and over, congregants are free to come in and out and harmonize as they feel moved- to join or to be silent, to create a living song. Sitting there in the dark among flickering candles, I remember being so sad. I was away from my family, able to view my life from a step back, a city away, a day away, and I was feeling the stress of the year vibrating under my skin and pulsing behind my eyes. I was sending it in waves up into the high darkness above me, and as I grappled with it, I thought and prayed, it's all okay. Accept it. Just accept your life, whatever condition it is in. Quit fighting the sorrow. I see a lot of joy in my life outlined with sorrow right now. All I can do is focus on ridding myself of the feeling that something is wrong. I am very sad about certain very specific things, and I grieve about them. But in this life, it's all part and parcel, the sorrow and the joy.
And that baby Damon, he is darn cute and a lot of fun..
-Kirstin
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Friday, January 25, 2013
Potty Training: A Stop Along the Way and what Happened There
On a whim I took my baby and toddler boy shopping at a certain children's thrift store today, which I won't name. I got there at 1:46 pm, only to read the sign taped to the door saying they will close at 2 due to winter weather. I poke my head in, saying, I’ll be quick. One male clerk behind the counter (the nice one) smiles and tells me, no problem, it’s all good. Or something like that. I park my toddler behind the carpeted wall barrier that marks off the designated play area (which keeps them from ransacking the merchandise the store is trying to sell.) I hurry off with my baby to quickly browse the sweaters and long sleeves that are marked down this late January day. (Wasn’t it just Christmas, when there were no real good deals to be had, unless you’re a masochistic Black Friday enthusiast?) Damon, my 11 month old, stands in front of the toys that are for sale, testing his stability and not doing much else.
- I find some little leather slippers with frogs on them for him. Perfect!
- A coordinating pant and tee set, and I think it’s a boutique brand. Nice!
- Aw, a Gymboree playsuit with a raccoon on the front... and a striped tail on the back? Yessss!
- Baby clothes- (I cluck to myself) most of the time, they hardly get worn and then they outgrow it. They’re more pre-washed than pre-worn.
The other clerk, (the colder one) passes by me, and I ask for confirmation that the shirts I am eyeing are indeed part of the buy-two, get-two-free sale (!!!). Making a sound in his throat to convey the inconvenience of my question (or my existence on this planet), he politely agrees, yes, they are on sale.
Alright. I throw Damon over my forearm so he’s looking at the floor, and a few brief cardigans and pullovers later, I’m checking out. I hear Jack in the play area, singing the ABCs and playing with the little green army men which were wedged in the play cash register drawer like military sardines in a can.
Just as I am about to head over there, I hear, “Mommy, I pooped. I pooped! And I peed. I’m wet!” I see the stain covering his pants and agree, yes, he is wet. @#$% (you know which expletive I mean). Damon is already nestled in the baby sling. I haul Jack back over the wall at arm’s length, taking care not to let any part of him touch that carpet that blankets it like a 70s rumpus room.
I survey the damage: The linoleum floor is a little wet, and it looks like one of the green army men took a hit. I pick it up, and order Jack to stay *right there* while I hurry off to the restroom in the back. I take the last of the paper towel, think for a second, rinse off the little army man, and leave him to dry on the edge of the sink (I mean, what would you do??).
Jack is continuing to inform me of his damp state. I make reassuring sounds, saying we’ll take care of it somewhere else. As I am laboriously leaning over that darned wall with my wad of cheap paper towel in hand, and Damon is protesting getting wedged between me and it, the 2nd clerk comes over and says, word-for-word, “If I may ask... what is *that*... on the floor?” (Did you not hear Jack’s store-wide announcement, Buster?) I pause, then, striving for understatement, I say, “well, he’s potty training.” Pause. “It looks like it’s just the floor that is a little wet.” He replies, “We’ll try to find SOME way to get it clean.” A little pee? Really?
I ask you, who is the most wretched one of us:
1) me, the chagrined mother, who somehow naively deemed training pants to be optional when my poor little guy still can’t quite figure out where number 2 goes;
2) the clerk, who just wants to get the *heck* home and who doesn’t want to accept that he works at a CHILDREN’S SECOND HAND STORE (which I love to patronize, by the way, no shame there... which is partly my point). What does he THINK is going to happen here- swingin’ and stylish twenty-somethings sloshing their martinis on the floor, while they flirt and exchange witticisms?
3) or, poor Jack, who is wearing soggy Elmo underwear full of you-know-what, and will soon have his bare butt exposed to 25 degree weather and freezing rain, lying on the floor of the minivan, the door wide open, while I clean him up?
I'll end the story there to leave something to the imagination, but what I have to offer is this: Humility, people! This Lutheran is preachin’ humililty- a warm cup of it to go around! Think on it. Nothing makes a person humble like being in the toilet training trenches, rag in hand. Even if you haven't potty trained a small person, your mother, father grandmother, or other beloved caregiver did- for you.
Happy skidding cars and “wintery mix” from Charlotte, North Carolina!!
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