John Brown’s Body

On Saturday morning instead of diving right into our normal weekend chores, Beth set up the wading pool and the sprinklers in the backyard. We had an extra day of weekend due to the Memorial Day holiday and the day had a relaxed feel. June amused herself stepping in and out of the pool over and over again. Noah ran through the sprinkler. Beth took pictures and she and Noah shot a little movie, a new pastime of theirs. (For a look at their first effort see www.noahsmovies.com. They even composed the music!) Neither of us wore a watch, but we both suspected it was getting on lunchtime. I knew I should feed June so she didn’t melt down before her nap, but I didn’t want to get up out of my chair. It felt like one of those study breaks in the library in college when you went down to the basement to get a snack from the vending machine and you ran into friends hanging out and talking and all sense of time and responsibility melted away and all of a sudden it was an hour later and you still hadn’t done your reserve reading.

We did linger too long, but it was Noah who had the tantrum. Something was wrong about the movie. He hadn’t shot the right scene and for some reason he couldn’t go back and do what he wanted. He lay on his back in the grass and cried.

“Do you suppose this happens to Martin Scorsese?” Beth asked. I shrugged and took June inside. A minute later I was back with a couple slices of baby Swiss for Beth who was waiting out the tantrum. I figured it would be a while before she got any lunch.

Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning we passed the kids back and forth while we cleaned and grocery shopped. Beth took frequent phone calls from her mother. Andrea and her three sisters (Carole, Susan and Jenny) were taking a long weekend road trip through West Virginia and we were planning to meet up with them in Harper’s Ferry on Sunday afternoon. Their plans kept shifting and failing to coalesce, however, frustrating Beth, who wanted to make hotel reservations for Sunday night.

We left the house at quarter to one on Sunday afternoon without firm plans. We had hotel reservations, but we expected to cancel them and make new ones in a different town. After an hour’s drive and a short shuttle ride from Harper’s Ferry National Park (www.nps.gov/archive/hafe/home.htm) to the actual town, we met the four sisters. Everyone exclaimed over the kids, how tall Noah was getting and how cute June looked in her West Virginia University jumper and socks. Noah proudly showed off his star-spangled American Idol sunglasses, the first reward he won with his good behavior stickers at school. June eyed the sisters with the suspicious look she gives anyone she thinks might pick her up.

The sisters pointed out that we should really make those hotel reservations, and then they vanished. Andrea headed for the restrooms and the others went off in search of bottled water. We were left standing on the sidewalk. I let June out of her stroller so she could stretch her legs in the shade of a tree and she began picking burrs up off the ground and shaking them enthusiastically. Eventually the sisters returned, reservations were cancelled and new ones made and we set out to hike a short stretch of the Appalachian Trail, along the Potomac River.

After our hike, on the way to get ice cream, we passed a Daughters of the Confederacy monument to an African-American man who’d been the first person killed in John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry. A teenage girl skimmed the text and told her younger brother, “It says it’s for the blacks who didn’t fight back.” Not a bad summary, really. It was then that it hit me what an appropriate place Harper’s Ferry was to visit over Memorial Day weekend, several years into America’s involvement in another country’s bloody civil war. Suddenly the park employees in period costume and the renovated Civil-War era storefronts seemed more connected to actual people and events, less a quaint backdrop for the crowds of twenty-first century tourists taking pictures and standing in line for ice cream. Andrea wanted to see the gallows where they hung John Brown, but it wasn’t in Harper’s Ferry. Beth pointed out John Brown’s Coffee and Tea shop and I made a joke about John Brown’s body lying a-moulderin’ in the coffee shop, but it fell flat.

We needed to eat early so we could get the kids to bed so Andrea accompanied us to a Mexican restaurant and we left the aunts at the hotel. We rejoined them in their room after dinner. June showed off her walking prowess, toddling all around the room. Jenny taught Noah how to play hangman. Susan gave unauthorized hints over Jenny’s protests, saying she couldn’t help it if she knew the answers– she was smarter than Jenny because she was older. When Beth said she’d have to stop, Noah said, completely in earnest, “She can’t help it. She’s just really smart.” As we talked, we shared the strawberries Beth had bought at the farmers’ market that morning. They were the first really ripe, locally grown strawberries this year, the kind that remind you what strawberries are supposed to taste like. Beth had bought three quarts. Juice dripped down June’s face and hands and when she grabbed the white coverlet for balance, she stained it red.

The next morning we lingered in the breakfast room. Noah, clad in shark pajamas and Halloween pumpkin socks, sat with the aunts and listened as Carole told a childhood story that ended, “And then my mother said, ‘You were supposed to be watching Susie and now she’s sitting in a bucket of water.’” I’d never heard anyone refer to Susan as Susie before.

On the drive back home, Noah chose to listen to his Banjo Man cd. Banjo Man (www.banjomanfc.com) is a Takoma Park institution. His repertoire consists mainly of kids’ music, but like any bluegrass musician worth his salt, he also plays some Stephen Foster and some twentieth-century songs about the Civil War. Certain lyrics jumped out at me:

When we grow up we’ll both be soldiers
Our horses won’t be toys
And maybe then you’ll remember when we were two little boys.

Back home, I watched Noah and June in the backyard again while Beth ran to the grocery store for corn and watermelon for our Memorial Day dinner and baking mix for strawberry shortcake. Noah had piled the wading pool full of objects he found in the yard in an experiment to see what sinks and what floats. June sat in the grass and watched him. It was a beautiful afternoon, but I felt melancholy. I couldn’t help but think of the soldiers in Iraq, so many miles from their own families this holiday weekend, and of the moms and dads who watched their kids splash in the wading pool twenty years ago and now have only photographs and maybe some grandkids to remember them by. And worst of all– because of the sheer numbers– the almost unfathomable number of Iraqi families shattered by the violence of the past four years.

June was fussy after dinner so I took her to the front porch to swing in the sky chair. I sang her one of her favorite songs, “Clementine,” a song that used to reduce me to tears as a child.

Oh my darling, oh my darling, oh my darling Clementine
You are lost and gone forever, dreadful sorry, Clementine.

None of my friends or family members is serving in this war. I am almost untouched by it. But I am dreadful sorry.

Now We Are Six

It was the first day of May. The barista at our local coffeehouse glanced at my receipt before handing it to me and exclaimed, “It’s May already.”

I told her I was very aware of the date since my son would be six in two days. She surprised me by making a sympathetic sound, as if I’d announced he had chicken pox instead of an imminent birthday. I gave her a quizzical look and she said, “Five is so fun. I really liked five on my younger sisters.” She went on to explain that she’s the oldest in a family of six girls and a boy and she let me know in no uncertain terms that five is a better year than six. I guess she’d know. Interestingly, the book we have out of the library on six year olds seems to have the same thesis.

On the morning of his birthday, Noah opened his presents before school. We got him a few things, but the big hits seemed to be the robot kit and the weather-tracking computer program. He and Beth were on the computer looking at global weather forecasts and pictures of real-time cloud cover over the Earth when it was time to get on the bus. Of course, he didn’t want to stop and he left the computer in tears, but Beth said he was cheerful again before they even got off the porch.

That evening I made Noah’s favorite dinner— pancakes— while he started to assemble a robot using a diagram from the instructions. I picked an apple-cottage cheese pancake recipe that looked good and reserved some cottage cheese-free batter for him since he’s a picky eater and I thought he might object to cottage cheese in his pancakes. When he’d finished his pancakes and wanted more, I asked if he wanted to try to cottage cheese ones and to my surprise, not only did he try one, but he liked it, too. After dinner, Beth helped him finish the robot. That night he slept on his top bunk for the first time. (When we got him the bunk bed toward the end of my pregnancy with June we told him he could sleep on the top when he was six and he’s been eagerly awaiting this milestone.) He seemed a little anxious as I tucked him in, but when we asked him if he wanted to change his mind and sleep below, he said no. A few days earlier he had told me that once he was six he wouldn’t need me to lie down with him at night anymore but I didn’t mention this and he didn’t either. There’s such a thing as too much change all at once, and I don’t mean just for him.

The next day, Friday, was Noah’s class party. Beth and I had dentist appointments in the morning and the party in the afternoon and the house to clean for his home party the next day, so she took the whole day off. When we got to Noah’s classroom he was still filling out a language arts worksheet about syllables that most of the other students had finished. He tried to run over to us, but we told him to keep working. He kept glancing up at us and grinning as Beth and the parents of the other birthday celebrant set up the tables and I walked June around the room. I went over to the windowsill to see if his basil seeds had sprouted but there was only moist soil in the clear plastic cup marked “Noah.” Noah had complained to me earlier about his non-starter seeds so I wanted to see they were making any progress. Most of the other cups sported healthy-looking sprouts of various species but there were a few other barren plots. I was glad of that, at least.

When the tables were set up, Señora A told Noah he could finish his worksheet on Monday and he joined his classmates at the tables. The room was noisy with the chatter of fifteen five and six-year-olds, almost all of it in Spanish. When “Feliz Cumpleaños” was sung, the candles blown out, the cupcakes eaten and the juice boxes drunk, it was time to leave. Noah was excited to be walking home with us instead of riding the bus. As he gathered up his backpack and lunchbox, Beth handed Señora A a signed form (a vague but ominous-sounding communication from his school) indicating we would be attending the meeting of Noah’s “educational management team” later this month. And then Señora A asked if we could stay after school to talk. Oh no, not today, I thought. Can’t he just have his party and go home? But we stayed.

Noah had a run of almost two weeks’ good behavior. He even had a perfect 18-point day earlier in the week. We knew he’d gotten into trouble (with a substitute) for knocking over chairs in the classroom and missed recess for it the day before, but we thought in general things were going pretty well. And they were, until that day. He got low marks in all categories, but there were two particularly worrisome incidents. He got into a tussle with a girl over a pencil (hers) and he pulled Ruby’s hair, hard enough so that a strand of it came out in his hand. I reminded Señora A and Noah to speak in English so Beth could follow, but they kept forgetting and the conversation slid back and forth between the two languages. Meanwhile, June, who had been cooped up in her car seat or stroller or held on my lap in the classroom most of the day, was getting squirmy and starting to cry. I walked her around the room, letting her play with an abacus, then settling in the block corner where she played while I tried to listen. I can’t believe he pulled Ruby’s hair, I kept thinking. Finally, it was over. “Feliz Cumpleaños,” Señora A said as we left.

At home, Noah helped me hose off our pollen-coated porch and then settled in to watch television. I sat with him and watched June crawl around the room while Beth cleaned. At 5:30, we set off for a Thai restaurant in Silver Spring. Because Beth and I went out for Thai the night I went into labor with Noah, we have a tradition of going out for Thai around his birthday. But Noah, worn out from the excitement of his party, upset about the meeting that followed—who knows? —didn’t want to go. He said he wanted pizza. Somehow we talked him into getting into the car. It wasn’t until we got to the restaurant that he completely melted down. He was under the table, crying, demanding to know why we came to this restaurant with no food (i.e. no pizza). It was a scene less surprising than it would have been a month ago.

Beth escorted him out of the restaurant, telling me what to order for her. They were gone a long time. The fried tofu appetizer arrived and I ate a third of it, saving the rest for Beth and Noah. They came back as the rest of food was coming. Noah seemed cheerful and wolfed down the tofu and several plates of noodles. It was as if nothing had happened. (Later I asked Beth what she did. She said they just sat outside by the fountain while he cried. He was quiet for a while, then the storm out of his system, he said, “Let’s go back inside.”) After dinner we got smoothies (for me and June) and ice cream (for Beth and Noah) listened to some street musicians, then we went to the turf, where Noah rode his scooter until it was time to go home.

The party was the next day, at 5 p.m. We had to schedule it late in the day to accommodate the busy lives of Noah’s friends, filled with soccer practice, play dates and the party of the classmate who shares his birthday. My mother arrived in the early afternoon. When Noah opened her presents, rather ungraciously, Beth and I decided he would open his friends’ presents after the party, rather than during, as he had suggested.

Mom helped clean the patio furniture and frost the cake. Beth decorated it with a white cloud outlined in blue frosting set in a blue sugar sprinkle sky, since the party had a weather theme. I was nervous since this was Noah’s first party with children I did not (for the most part) know very well. To make matters worse, Noah had announced the day before that one of the guests was not his friend, but his “enemy.” (The boy and his friends have been stealing Noah and his group’s ball at recess. The ball is an armadillo in an elaborate fantasy game, set in a castle, they play every day— but that’s another story.) I wondered how everyone would get along. Beth, as is her habit when she’s under stress, got cranky. It didn’t help that she had to make the cake twice, since she remembered (as the first one was in the oven) that she’d forgotten the sugar. This threw off her schedule. Somehow, though, the baking and the cleaning and the decorating all got done. Beth attached the balloons (one in the shape of the number six and one that said “Feliz Cumpleaños”) to the gate and arranged the colorful wooden letters that spelled “NOAH” (a birthday gift from my sister) on the top of the porch stairs. I arranged the inflated plastic sun, clouds, raindrops, etc. in a path along the porch floor and wrote “Welcome” and “Bienvenidos” in chalk on the sidewalk.

The day before the party the forecast called for a high in the 70s and sun. On the day of the party the forecast was 60s and sun, but all afternoon it was overcast with occasional sprinkles and the temperatures never got out of the 50s. Nevertheless, we decided to keep as much of the party as possible outside. As the guests began to arrive, most of the parents made the same joke about such unpredictable weather at a weather party. But the kids didn’t seem to mind. The early arrivals grabbed the inflated weather shapes and a spontaneous weather parade formed. At one point, Maxine dropped hers and took up the sign in front of our house that reads “Peace, Love and Marriage for All Our Neighbors: Marriage is a Human Right” and marched with it at the head of the parade. (I just love Maxine.) At one point, Noah left the parade, saying there was “too much excitement out there.” Instead he helped Mom carry the presents inside. Soon after, he came back outside and was able to join the fun.

Around 5:25, all the guests had arrived except for Ruby, and Noah said glumly, “I don’t think Ruby is coming.” I thought he was probably right. Her father had already complained to the school about Noah rough-housing with her and I was afraid the hair-pulling incident might have put either Ruby or her dad over the edge. I decided I would tell Noah why I thought she hadn’t come after the party was over, to give him an idea of the seriousness of his actions. Still, I was sad for him, because Ruby is his best friend.

When the party moved to the backyard, I had my hands full getting one of the boys, (whom Noah reports is the only one to get in trouble as much as he does) off the porch. This was a scene that was repeated every time the kids moved: from outside to inside to make a weather wheel craft (you spin it to show the day’s weather), back outside for pizza and then inside for cake and the rest of the party once the weather got decisively wet and cold. The boy, dreamy and easily distracted, reminded me of Noah, but even more so. I must have been shepherding the dreamer from one place to another or nursing June when I missed a conversation at the sandbox in which some of the other party guests confronted Noah’s “enemy” about being on a different “team” than most of the others. Beth reports she got them to agree that the teams only apply at recess and here everyone was on the same team. She didn’t feel up to challenging their whole social hierarchy in one evening.

Around 6:30, just as cake was being served, Ruby and her father arrived. Quickly it became apparent that he intended to stay. Honestly, I couldn’t blame him. When Noah finished nursery school last spring there were a couple boys, the rowdier ones, I decided not to make any summer play dates with, because I thought they’d be a bad influence. Who knew how soon my own intelligent, charming, up-until-recently well-behaved son would be the troublemaker, the one with whom you don’t leave your child unsupervised if you can help it.

Ruby didn’t want any cake so I assured her father it didn’t have any eggs (she’s allergic) but she still didn’t want any. After a while she began sneezing and her dad asked if we had cats or dogs. “Two cats,” Beth answered. Turns out she’s allergic to dander as well. After a half hour her eyes were itchy and they made a hasty retreat.

When everyone was gone and Noah was bathed and the guests’ presents were opened and it was time for bed we asked Noah if he had a good time at his party. His hazel eyes shone. “I wish it was a dream,” he said. “So it could happen all over again.”

Sunday morning we ran into my friend Jim and his partner Kevin at the farmers’ market. A couple weeks ago, Jim (who’s childless) told me that Noah was “getting old enough to have interesting problems.” He wanted to know how the party went. I considered: no meltdowns, either on Noah’s part or his guests’, the enemy was temporarily taken into the fold, the dreamer didn’t wander into traffic, Noah’s lady love showed up and he wants to do it all over again, just like it happened. Pretty well, I said.

That night, up in Noah’s top bunk he told me that he and Señora A were going to plant new seeds. “That sounds like a good idea,” I said, “To start over.” I gave him one last squeeze before climbing down the ladder. “Now seeds,” I thought, “start growing!”

Happy Birthday, Dear Juney

June is one year old. It’s been a year since that late night ride to the hospital after my water broke six weeks early, a year since my surprise and unplanned vbac*, a year since I was released from the hospital without her, sent home to pump milk for her while she waited under the lights for her bilirubin levels to drop, a year since she came home with a light-emitting blanket, allowed out of it only to nurse. Was it just yesterday or in a different life that all this happened? Now her spiky black hair is a silky reddish-gold, long enough for her bangs to fall into her eyes. She crawls, cruises along the furniture, waves, claps and says a few words. She’s still a baby, but her baby days are numbered, and by extension, so are mine. A year and three days ago I was the pregnant mother of a preschooler. Sometime over the next few months, I will become the mother of a rising first-grader and a toddler.

A very small toddler, as it turns out. On Thursday, at June’s one-year appointment, we received the unwelcome news that at 16 pounds, 3 ounces, she has fallen off the charts for weight. She is growing, but very slowly. (Her head grew another half centimeter, which is the really good news.) I am not that worried about it, because she looks healthy, not at all scrawny or undernourished, and Noah went through a similar (though less dramatic) growth slow-down at the exact same age. Nonetheless, we are supposed to try to fatten her up, and bring her back for a weigh-in at thirteen months. After the appointment, we went out for crepes and gelato. I’d hoped it would feel like a celebratory lunch but I was brooding a little over June’s weight and Noah had acted up on the way over, getting in trouble with Beth, so everyone was a bit subdued. After lunch, we went home to clean the house in preparation for the descent of the grandmothers the following day.

Friday was June’s birthday. When Noah came to our bed around 6:30 for our daily family snuggle, we all sang “Happy Birthday” to her. She looked surprised but happy and when we were finished, she said “Day!” to us approvingly. Beth’s mother Andrea arrived that afternoon and when Beth got home from work, we all headed out to dinner at Baja Fresh, which was holding a fundraiser for Noah’s school. I brought along a dark chocolate bar for everyone to share after dinner. We gave Noah his first taste of chocolate on his first birthday and I thought it would be a nice tradition to carry on. June frowned a little at the bitter taste, but after careful consideration, she grabbed for another piece, and soon she was smiling a tiny smile and drooling a thin brown line down her chin.

My mother arrived the following afternoon while Beth and I were at the supermarket getting ladybug balloons. (Since we sometimes call June “June Bug” the party had a ladybug theme.) By then we were in full celebration-mode. Mom and Andrea began a daylong conversation, largely about June– her beauty (“Isn’t her hair a pretty color?” “Don’t you hope her eyes stay blue?”), intelligence (evidence: she clucks her tongue when you do and she holds up her Baa Baa Black Sheep book and says “baa baa”) and overall good nature. They were in full agreement about her good qualities as they have always been about Noah’s. Having grandchildren in common is a great bonding experience. Mom hadn’t seen June since my stepfather’s 65th birthday party and Andrea hadn’t since Beth’s gallbladder operation, both in January, so they marveled over her new skills, especially her crawling and her standing. As if she felt the need to impress her mothers in addition to her grandmothers, June added a new trick to her repertoire over the weekend. She finally learned to clap. (During her early attempts over the past few weeks, her hands kept missing each other.)

Soon there was plenty to clap over. Noah, Mom and I wrapped presents on the dining room table and once they were wrapped, we set them down on the living room floor for June to unwrap. There were toys, there were books, there were clothes, but best of all there were cards. June delighted in the cards, opening and closing them, examining them from all angles, waving them in the air while squealing with joy. Then there was the big present: the wagon. Beth and Noah had rehabbed his old push-wagon, one of his first birthday presents that had been languishing in the back yard since he outgrew it. They sanded off the rust and peeling paint, gave it a fresh coat of glossy red paint and painted her name on it in gold letters. After all the presents were opened, Noah went to the computer and played the “Big World Birthday” song from the PBS show It’s A Big, Big World:

Happy Birthday!
Happy Birthday!
How old are you?
How old are you?
Count the candles on your cake.
Smear your name for good luck’s sake.
We want cake!
We want cake!
Etc.

(To hear the entire song, go to http://pbskids.org/bigbigworld/music/song07_ra.html).

After we sang this song together, we headed to the table to sing the more traditional version (in English and Spanish) over the cake and ice cream. We blew out the numeral 1 candle on the cake (saved from Noah’s first birthday cake) and dug in. The cold of the ice cream was too much of a shock for June and she spat it out, but the cake met with her decided approval and in a short time, she had demolished her slice. By the time she finished eating her eyes were dazed and heavy-lidded. It looked like she might drop off in the chair if we didn’t get her cleaned up and off to her nap in short order.

Gradually, the party wound down. That night we ate pizza off the ladybug paper plates we had forgotten to use for the cake, watched The Electric Company and went to bed. My mother left Sunday morning. The rest of us went to the farmers’ market and came home laden with pansies for our front porch planters, apples and baked goods. (Noah complained, perversely, that the chocolate croissants were “too chocolaty”.) That afternoon while Beth was at the grocery store, Andrea and Noah watched while I helped June get started pushing the wagon across the porch floor. Her steps were hesitating and stiff-legged, but she beamed and laughed as she got her balance and the wagon lurched into motion ahead of her. Noah, who had been cranky and contrary much of the weekend, jealous no doubt of all the attention lavished on his baby sister, started to cheer her on.

Ella puede. Ella hace. ¡Ella gana!” he cried.

She can. She does. She succeeds! Indeed, she can and she does. Happy Birthday, dear Juney. Happy Birthday to you. And many more.

*vaginal birth after Caesarean