School has finally let out for the summer here. In the last week
Aden’s class did their annual Cosmic Creation Opera on stage (my
daughter was a yellow blob this year–I’ve never been more proud). She
brought home lots of artwork and more paper in her tattered backpack
than I know what to do with. We gave Mona’s teacher a small gift and
some flowers because in the fall Mona will be moving on to first grade. In Montessori school you stay with one teacher for three years, so
moving on to a new classroom is a big deal. Mona’s nervous, but she’ll
be fine. She’ll have all summer to get used to the concept.
We’re ready for summer break. I know people periodically review the
merits of year round schooling and say that summer vacation is outdated
and in some ways detrimental, and in part I agree with the logic, but in
my heart I favor the break. Maybe it’s because I’ve always lived in
the midwest where the summer months feel so radically different from the
rest, but the fall and winter schedules don’t work well when the
daylight stretches on so long and everything about the world beckons you
outside.
I’m a productive person, but I’m also a creative person, and I
know the value of being able to lounge around in an unstructured
environment. Long lazy days give you time to let ideas settle and shift
around and become something new. I love my memories from my childhood
of actually being bored over summer vacation. It was different from
being bored now. As an adult I’m only bored when I’m stuck someplace I
don’t want to be without a book or a sudoku puzzle, and it’s irritating
because I know there are other things I could be getting done
elsewhere. As a kid there was nothing else to get to or do. (Except
clean my room or do something useful, but that doesn’t occur to a fifth
grade solipsist.) Life, even at its best, is hard, so I want my kids to
play while they can so they can look back on growing up in Milwaukee
and say to themselves later, “Wasn’t that nice?”
I’m glad I don’t have to try and get everyone ready to leave the
house so early in the morning for awhile. It will be nice to go to the
zoo or a museum if we feel up to it, or just play catch in the field
behind the house until the sun sets if we want to. There are concerts
in the park to hear, ice cream trucks to chase, fireflies to capture,
and puddles to stomp in. When we’ve had our fill, fall will come around
and structure will start to look appealing again. But for now, despite
the challenges ahead of working with all the kids home, I’m ready for
summer.
The only real loss for me with this break is my time alone with
Quinn. He’s been my constant companion, and even though the occasional
tantrum at the violin store when I’m trying to work has made me doubt if
having him with me all the time has been the right decision, I’m lucky to have had him to myself for so long.
Lately at the violin store Quinn has spent his time on the computer.
He plays the Fetch games on the PBSkids website while I rehair bows and
repair instruments. He has his own routine there at the store,
munching on goldfish crackers and playing with blocks. I don’t get to
interact with him much while I’m working, but it’s nice that he’s in the
same room.
I try whenever possible to take him out somewhere if I can. He knows
the natural history museum here very well. He likes to sit in the
butterfly room and hold out a tentative finger in the hopes a tiny
butterfly will land on it, but if one ever did I’m sure he’d freak out.
He tells me to hold out my finger too, and I’m supposed to catch a big
one. The one time I did he couldn’t wait for me to let it go.
But my favorite days are the ones where I don’t have any appointments
at the store and we just come home after dropping off the girls at
school. It’s quiet with just my little boy here. We go online and look
at pictures of Jupiter and Neptune (the only planets with eyes, he
tells me). He lays out toys on the floor and asks me to click on one,
whatever that means. (About half the time I select something he tells
me it’s “not availble.”) We snuggle. We read books. I’m not allowed
to sing or play music, but he likes to put CDs in while I work in the
kitchen. His favorite tune of the moment is ABC by the Jackson Five,
and when his sisters aren’t home to complain we can just leave it on
repeat for as long as he likes. He’s a good eater. He’ll help me make
things for lunch like pasta salad that I know his siblings would never
touch. I love my lunches at home with Quinn. He plays in the sandbox
while I work on my own projects, and if he can sucker me into pushing
him on the swing he will happily swing back and forth forever.
Most mornings at home we spend a lot of time going around the block.
I bring a plastic bag with me and pick up trash to keep myself
occupied. (Why don’t smokers think tossing cigarette butts on the
ground is littering?) Quinn just pedals away on his trike, the happiest
little boy you ever saw. He collects important leaves and sticks and
puts them in the little compartment under the seat.
He’s a sweet little guy, but particularly when it’s just the two of
us. I feel so privileged to get to see a side of him that is just for
me. Quinn has spent all but a total of a couple of weeks of his life at
my side. He still sometimes crawls into my bed at night and snuggles
up. When he needs a nap he climbs into my arms. I like being his home
base. When he wants to hold my hand he grabs onto just my pinky. He’s
gentle and dear and when he laughs I feel like in that moment I
understand something important about life and that it’s wonderful. His
smile makes me melt every time.
I don’t mean to make it sound like there aren’t moments he makes me
nuts. There are too many mornings where we’d all be better off if I
could let him sleep in so he wouldn’t be cranky, but I’ve had to drag
him out of bed to get his sisters to school. Most days he adapts fine,
but on the days he doesn’t he’s made trying to get any work done at the
violin store impossible. I’ve had to turn away business just because a
lunchtime appointment when I run out of food for Quinn at the store is
too frustrating to deal with. But on the whole Quinn is a remarkably
easy kid. Way better behaved than the average child, so when he does
have an outburst I have to remember he’s just acting his true age. And
three is cute cute cute, but really difficult at times. There is
nothing quite like the petulance of a three year old who hits a
combination of hungry and tired that is beyond all reason. But he
won’t be three for much longer, and I try every day to appreciate the
sweetness of this age.
He’s taller and leaner than he was when his dad left. He still has
baby fat in his cheeks, but nowhere else. I can learn to share him when
Ian gets back from Iraq, but I’ve enjoyed having my little guy to
myself. I try to picture him as a man one day, maybe able to lift me in
his arms the way I currently lift him. It’s hard to imagine him
heading off into the world without me, but if I do my job right that’s
where we’re headed. This chapter of our lives where it’s just the two
of us together most of the day is over beginning with this summer
vacation. He runs off to join his sisters’ games each morning, and in
the fall he starts school. I already miss him.
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