Beware of the Goose

There is something amazing about the age 4.  The things that come out of their mouths is often priceless and sadly, I have been so busy with work and the kids, I haven’t had the chance to document many of them.

We were driving home on Sunday from my dad’s house and Zoë says so innocently:

“I know what a haunted house is?”

“Really?” I ask–she currently has always known everything.

“Yep.”

“Well, what is a haunted house?”

“A house no one lives in and we have one by our house.”

“We do?”  I ask knowing full well what house she is talking about.  We have a vacant house on our little block–while they get it ready to sell.

“The one by Madeline and Nora’s.”

“Zoë, a haunted house is not an empty house.  A haunted house is a house where ghosts live.”

“Oh.  I think that one is a haunted.”

“Really, why?”

“I think I saw a goose in there…or maybe a duck.”

So, beware of the goose’s ghost 🙂

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Last night we were driving home for a long night of activities for Noah and Zoë provided more entertainment.

“Mom, remember at Christmas eve when we were driving home and we were looking in the sky for Rudo.”

“Rudo?”

“The reindeer with the red nose.”

Noah started laughing and I tried not to–because she is 4 and only his close friends get to call him Rudo.

“That is Rudolf honey.”

“Oh.”

Then she started to sing–after Noah and I argued for 3 minutes on the correct pronunciation of “rudolf”

I say Rudolf and Noah said Rudoff.

 

A Lesson That Will Surely Come Back to Bite Me

Another episode of “I totally rock at this parenting thing.” otherwise known as “Things I will certainly regret as my children grow.”

This summer we got summer passes to a pool near our house.  We did this last year (at a different pool) and the kids loved it and we loved it.  It’s nice to be able to go to the pool and hang out–especially as the kids get older and more independent.

So, this pool, has a diving board and a slide.  For the slide you need to be the dreaded and ever-elusive 48″ tall.  Noah is certain he is never going to be 48″ tall.  And. His. Life. Is. Ruined. Because. He. Can’t. Go. Down. The. Slide. Oh, just you wait little man, your life will be ruined by so many things–mostly your parents telling you NO.  We happened to go to the pool one afternoon last week, when I took off work early and ran into a friend of his from school, who isn’t going to his school anymore.

So, they were playing and then wanted to see if they could go down the slide.  And like the good, polite, rule-abiding kids we are raising them to be they stopped to ask the life guard if they were tall enough. I know, it is so cute before they grow out of that whole phase.

It was a sad moment for him (and I am so proud of how he handled himself) as his friend was allowed to go down and Noah wasn’t.  Even though his friend wasn’t really tall enough either–clearly there is a sliding scale for the whole 48″ thing.  So, Noah came back over and I could tell his little heart was broken but he dealt with the unfairness in stride while his friend went down the slide a few times.

We stayed at the pool later that day then his friend and as I watched the slide line, I noticed some kids who were clearly shorter than Noah and it got me thinking–there were some lifeguards who were very by the “rules” and others who see the 48″ as a guideline.  I pointed this out to Noah and told him the next time we/he goes to the pool he should just walk up there and get in line to go down without asking if he is tall enough and see what happens.

Fast forward 12 years, when he is 18 and walking up to buy beer in the college town like he knows what he’s doing–I totally win at parenting.  Totally.

So, he was able to go down the slide the next time he went to the pool for  a while, then a new life guard stopped him, but the next one didn’t.  He’s like the Raptors in Jurrasic Park learning where the weakness in the fences are.  He couldn’t have been happier. “Mom, I did what you said and it totally worked.”

I know–the rules are there for his protection and I totally get that.  But he can dive off the diving board into 12 feet of water and swim to the side all by himself–I think the slide might be a little less dangerous.

So, I have taught my son that rules are just guidelines and if you act like you belong somewhere–people won’t question you (most of the time).  Yay for me.

We Totally Rock At This Parenting Thing

Bill has an eclectic music collection.  The kids really enjoy music, so Bill spend a lot of time making music CD’s for the kids to listen to in the car.  The songs range for oldies (Splish/Splash) to contemporary (Lady Gaga) and lots of stuff in between.

Turns out that Bill doesn’t always pay a lot of attention to the lyrics in the songs he puts on the CD’s.

“So, I put a Nelly song on this one and it has a bad word in it.” Bill confesses.

“A bad word?”  I ask.  I like Nelly and have several songs in my playlists–I don’t remember a song that has one bad word.

“You mean the one where they say ‘think with your mind and not your penis?'” Noah asks from the back (he totally raps the lyric.

“There maybe a few songs that have some questionable lyrics.”  Bill smiles at me.

Yeah.  We totally rock at this parenting thing.

Moments

There are moments that I wish I could freeze in time.  There are moments that are so precious and important.  Today is the kids last full day of school.  Tomorrow is a half-day with an end of year showcase/assembly.  I can’t believe that another school year is over.

Noah is moving on to FIRST GRADE! OMG.  First grade.  It seems like just yesterday that he was learning to walk and was still saying “Woah” and “Opiopia.”  Now he can read and write.  Now he can problem solve and has given two public “speeches.”  He is confident and knows that kids can do important things.  He is considerate and is showing real signs of emotional development.  He is simply–amazing.  I am constantly surprised by him, his spirit, his kindness, his love, his wit.  He is so excited to be moving to first grade.  I am happy that his entire class will be continuing on with him.  He has made some good friends and is very well-liked.

One of the things that has begun to really stick out is his ability to learn things.  He is so very teachable.  He takes instruction well and picks things up easily.  I have only recently started to notice this.  His gymnastics instructor mentioned this weeks ago and I didn’t pay much attention.  But now he is learning to play golf and he asked to get a golf teacher.  He picks up quickly the instruction of his piano teacher.  He loves to learn things.  I will work hard to ensure that he keeps this love for learning.

Zoë is finishing her first year of preschool.  She is excited to be moving on to the next preschool class.  She can write her name and nearly all of her letters.  She recognizes her letters and she is very interested in reading and wants to learn.  I feel bad, as I haven’t had the time to dedicate to her the time to give her what she needs/wants.  I am making a concerted effort this summer and I am going to make sure that the kids do some academic work with their “nanny” this summer.  And I plan to work with them both this summer.  They want to learn and as a teacher–it would be disheartening to me if I didn’t help them learn and grow.  As a parent, it’s my job.

Zoë has made some amazing friends and she’ll get some new ones next year.  She has a love for live that is unparalleled.  Her spirit is infectious and amazing.  She has grown so much over this school year.  She has learned to navigate relationships and how to express her feelings.  She has also developed into quite a story teller–yes that’s a polite way of saying liar.  She is really good at it.  It is scary.  We are working really hard on getting her to understand that lying is bad, etc.  It is hard.  Any insight would be great.   She loves hard and completely.  She has a huge heart and loves an audience.

Watching the kids grow has thus far been an amazing journey.  I look forward to the next years and seeing them grow and begin to blossom.  Being a parent is the hardest thing I have done, but it also the most amazing thing I have been given the gift to do.

Each moment is precious.

I Didn’t Understand Then But Do Now

Dear Justin,

I am sorry it took the shooting of Trayvon Martin for me to understand what you said all those years ago.  I am sorry I didn’t see your wisdom of experience.  I was too naive to understand.  I was too stuck in my own world of white privilege to really hear you.  And for that I am sorry.  You asked a question that seemed absurd to me in 2006, before I brought my Ethiopian son home.  We were in class and I remember the moment vividly.  I was telling the class about our impending adoption of a child from Ethiopia.  We had just received our referral and knew we were going to have a son.

The class was asking questions and then you asked me “who is going to teach him how to be black.”  At that moment, that questions seemed ridiculous.  I turned it into a  teachable moment, to discuss what it really meant to be black (ridiculously, white–I understand that now).  I challenged you in your question.  I talked about how my son’s world would be one of middle class suburbia and private schools.  Just thinking back on this moment, I am filled with shame.  I thought I was your ally.  I thought I understood what your live was like to some extent.  But I looked at your life through my own lens of privilege.

I was naive to think that my privilege would somehow make my son’s skin color less noticeable.  That some how the fact that we are upper-middle class affords him the ability to be both black and privileged.

I was so wrong.  I wish I had really heard your question.  I wish I had listened instead of trying to teach from my perch of privilege.  How foolish I was.  How naive I was.  How wrong I was.  How sorry I am that I trivialized your experience and what it means to be black.  That it even meant something at all to be black. I could have learned so much.

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I spent  years working in urban schools with a majority black student population, before I left teaching in 2006 to stay home.  I was “enlightened.”  I will admit I uttered the words “I don’t see color, I see students.”  I can also now admit that that statement is an utter lie.  Of course, I saw skin color; the color just didn’t matter to me.  And it should matter.  But I can’t live with my head in the sand and pretend it doesn’t matter.  Because now, as the mother of two black children, it matters immensely.

It mattered when he was three and we were walking to the park in our 95% white neighborhood and he asked “mom will the other kids think I am different because my skin is brown?”  It mattered when he was watching a play at a community theater with a group of friends –who were all white–and he was the only one told to be quiet for talking.  It will matter when he asks a white girl out and her parents forbid it.  It will matter when he forgets his house key and climbs through the front window.  It will matter.

The death of Trayvon Martin is a tragedy.  He should still be alive.  His parents should still have him to scold, guide and love.  The death of Trayvon Martin is a wake-up call.  The murder of Trayvon Martin has shaken me to the core.  Trayvon is my son.  My son is too young to know what happened to Trayvon.  He is only 5.  But he can see injustice in being singled out to be quiet when it other friends are doing the same thing he is.

I’ll never understand what it is like to be black.  But I have to mine all the information I can, so that my son can know what it means to be black in our bigoted and prejudicial society.  How to be black in a world that will look at him in his teen and young-adult years and see danger and suspicion.

Jesse Washington wrote:

As I explained it, the Code goes like this:

Always pay close attention to your surroundings, son, especially if you are in an affluent neighborhood where black folks are few. Understand that even though you are not a criminal, some people might assume you are, especially if you are wearing certain clothes.

Never argue with police, but protect your dignity and take pride in humility. When confronted by someone with a badge or a gun, do not flee, fight, or put your hands anywhere other than up.

Please don’t assume, son, that all white people view you as a threat. America is better than that. Suspicion and bitterness can imprison you. But as a black male, you must go above and beyond to show strangers what type of person you really are.

It is my responsibility as a white parent of two black children, to teach them what their skin color means and how it might effect their lives.  I have to push aside my privilege and really look at what happens in our world. I have to admit that my privilege does not transfer to my children.

I am so sorry that it took another mother losing a child for me to fully understand that question Justin asked nearly 6 years ago.  I have an answer now–Who is going to teach my son to be black?  Well, I have to.  I. Have. To.  I have saved nearly every piece of writing on Trayvon Martin, by those of color who articulate, however painful it might be, what it means to be a black man in America.  It might be my most important role. It might help my son navigate the world.