A few nights ago, after her bath, I was sitting at the
computer with Shay looking at potential summer hairstyles she might like. Earlier, while Shay was in the bath, I had
done the same with Mo. All I had done
was search for “African American hairstyles” on the web, and a whole slew of
celebrity pictures popped up. What I had
been trying to do was look for Macy Gray, because Mo’s hair does the spiky
thing naturally without, in Mo’s intractable words, “turning into a weirdo ‘fro.” We realized this when Mo had been playing and
running in the sprinklers all day. She
came in all out of breath, trying to relay some direly important piece of
kid-world information, and all I could do was stare at her hair.
It looked AMAZING.
Or at least, might with the slightest bit of work. I was just happy that we had seemed to find a
hairstyle that her hair naturally wants to do anyway, and maybe it just needed
a little help to make it look like it had been professionally done.
Well, when I showed her a picture of Macy Gray (who is
beautiful, by the way), Mo’s face twisted all around in disgust. “I’m NOT going to have that kind of hair!”
she nearly spat. “I want that lady’s hair!”
She pointed to a picture of Oprah.
Oprah.
Not that there’s anything wrong with Oprah, or her
hair, but just…I mean…if my parents one day pulled out a picture of Johnny
Rotten and told me I’d look good with that haircut, I sure as shit wouldn’t
have decided to instead go with Johnny Carson.
Anyway, once Mo had decided to get the hair of a 60
year old media icon billionaire, Shay came in and started looking over the
pictures.
“Which one do you like, babe?” I asked.
She ran her little finger along the computer screen,
occasionally stopping over a picture, then moving on. Finally she just sighed and put her head on
my shoulder.
“What’s the matter?
Can’t find one you like?”
“I don’t know I guess.
It doesn’t matter that much to me.”
“Well, you need a good hairdo for the summer don’t
you?”
That’s when she looked me dead in the eye and said
with the earnestness of a Buddhist monk:
“Dad, I don’t need
a hair do, because all I need is food, and shelter, and love. I want a
summer hairdo, but I don’t need it. Do you understand?” Then she cupped my face with her little soft hands
and turned my head to meet her gaze. “Do
you understand the difference between wants and needs?”
And her wide brown eyes darted across mine, searching
to see if I understood her in this little childhood moment of clarity.
I didn’t know whether to laugh or start crying at
this. I started to do both. I cleared my throat and said, “Yes, honey, I
understand the difference. I think we
have your needs covered then. So…what do
you want for a summer haircut?”
She smiled, then pointed at a random picture of a girl
with flat-ironed hair and said, “That one is fine.”
Later, after the girls were in bed, I told Amy about
our little encounter. She said, “Awww,”
then, “they probably went over wants and needs in school today.”
“Yeah, probably.
Funny though.”
I think we all know the school-book answer of wants
and needs. We remind kids of the
difference all the time, whenever they say that they “have” to have something, and
we wearily tell them that no, they won’t die
without that pair of jeans or whatever.
That’s a pretty standard encounter.
But I started to really ponder the difference. Do we, as adults, actually understand it?
I remember talking to a friend of mine at the Air
Force Academy. We were talking, for some
reason, about the worst thing we had ever said to our parents.
I told the story about how my mom, as was her custom,
one day called me a “little sonofabitch.”
Well, on that day I had taken my crazy pills. So I looked her dead in the eye and
said,
“You’re right.”
Got a whuppin for that one.
My friend, despite my expectation of laughter, just
kind of grunted and looked at the wall.
This friend of mine was the product of his father and
his father’s second wife. His first wife
had died in a car crash when the two were very young, before they had any
children. He then re-married and went on
to have a couple of other kids. But my
friend told me that his father had never spoken much about his first wife or
the accident that killed her. Anyway,
around the time my friend was ten, he had been pondering the way life
works out. He had had a very innocent
concept of how the world worked, and that most things, when good comes of them,
are happy things for which to be thankful.
So one day he says to his dad, “Dad, I’m glad your
first wife died in that car crash.”
His father just stopped whatever he was doing and
slowly turned to his son, who stood there confident and somewhat proud of his
deductive reasoning.
“What? What did
you just say to me?”
My friend saw the look in his father’s eyes, a look of
utter shock and unfathomable pain, as if he had taken a bat and hit him over
the head with it. My friend’s confidence
faltered. “I…well, I just meant…that if
that hadn’t happened, then…”
“I know what you meant. And I love you. But don’t ever say that to me again.” His father then walked out of the room, and my
friend thought he heard his dad suck in a few sobs as he closed the bedroom door behind him.
This was the story he relayed to us, and I still
remember the look on my friend’s face as he told it. That was his moment, that moment we all have,
that pops into our memory out of nowhere to remind us of how cold and
thoughtless we can be. And even though
we hate the memory and our guts tie in knots and our skin grows clammy as we
recollect it, we hold it close so we will never, ever do something like that
again.
The other morning Shay told Amy that she looked
pregnant.
Now, we’ve all been warned against saying this to a
woman. We’ve all heard the story of someone
who knew someone who said this to a woman and the woman replied, “No, honey, I’m
just fat.” But for Amy, that isn’t much
of a worry. And it certainly wasn’t the
reason Amy got a little upset.
“Mom, I said you look pregnant. Are you?
Because I had a dream that you were pregnant, and…”
“Shay, quit saying that, okay? You’re upsetting Mommy.”
Shay looked taken aback, started to sniffle, and said,
“Okay.”
Later that morning, as I was driving the girls to
school, I turned down the radio. “Shay?”
I asked.
“Yes?”
“Do you know why Mommy doesn’t want to hear that she
looks pregnant?”
“Because she doesn’t want to look fat!” answered Mo.
“Because she doesn’t want to look fat!” answered Mo.
“No, that’s not the reason. Girls, you know that Mommy and I haven’t been
able to have any babies, right? And you
know that we tried for a long time but couldn’t. You remember me telling you that, right?”
“Yes,” they said in unison.
“Okay. So when
you tell Mommy she looks pregnant, she gets sad because it reminds her of that
time. So let’s not say
it, okay? You shouldn’t say it to any
woman ever anyway. You never know for
sure and you might hurt their feelings.”
“Okay,” said Mo, who went back to looking at her book.
“But…” started Shay.
“What, honey?”
“But, did you want
babies?”
“Yes. We did
very much.”
“But if you did have them, then…”
Silence. At
this point I knew where her little mind was taking her. And I thought I knew what her dream the night
before was really about.
“What’cha thinking, Shay? You can say it.”
“Nothing,” she sighed.
“What was your dream about? Did you dream that Mommy had a baby?”
“Yes.”
“And…then what?”
“Well, nothing I guess, but you guys were really
happy, and then…”
“Then, what?”
“Then I woke up and I got scared.”
“Were you scared that we were going to have a baby and
then not want you guys anymore?”
Silence. Then,
barely audible, “Kind of.”
I thought for a moment of what to say. The fact is, if we would have had a baby, or two, or whatever, then no, we probably
wouldn’t have become foster parents, and these girls would have been somewhere else.
But how in the hell do I convey that to a kid? How in the hell do I tell this little girl
that she wasn’t ever really in our plans?
How do I say that without sounding like we actually wanted someone else?
“Girls, I want you to listen to me very
carefully. Your mother and I love you
very, very much…”
It started to sound lame. It started to sound like lip service, and I
didn’t know where I was really going to go with it. So I changed course.
“Shay, do you remember the other day when you asked if
I knew the difference between wants and needs?”
“Yes.”
“Okay.
Hmm. Well, this is really what it means to grownups who
have lived a while and have had a lot of things we loved go away, who have had
a lot of things not go the way we thought they should, and have seen a lot of
bad stuff happen. When you get a little
older and get more experience in life it’s just how it goes. But we’ve also seen a lot of great things happen. And we see how they can rise up out of the
awfulness. We see that things are
beautiful in ways we never imagined, because as we get older we see new kinds
of beauty that keep surprising us.
Grownups are full of wants. All
we do is want. All the time. But life can turn around and take those wants
from you and smash them.”
I took a few breaths, trying to figure out where this
was going to go. “The trick that some
grownups never learn,” I continued, “is to see the things we really need and
grab them and hold them and love them.
Yes, we wanted babies. We still do.
And it may one day happen, we don’t know. But always remember this: we needed you. You two are the beauty that rose up from the
hurt. And because of you, it’s brighter
and more wonderful then we ever thought possible.”
I had to stop at that point, as I was choking myself
up. I thought of my friend and his story
about his father, how the first wife had died, how awful that must have been,
yet how from the dust of despair two children had risen and become his pride
and joy. I thought of how I had received
an eye injury at the Air Force Academy as a junior and had been disqualified
from pilot training, how destroyed I had been, but if that had not
happened, my path would have been vastly different and I’d probably not be married
to Amy. I thought about three years ago,
how terrible it had been with each new month, with each new disappointment, and
the day the CPS worker had shown up with the girls, ratty and smelly and
afraid, them needing us…
us needing them…
Then Mo said, “So God makes up for it?”
I snapped out of it.
“Well, that’s one way to put it.
I believe that. But we can’t take
a passive role in that giving. Have you
heard that saying, ‘when you’re in a hole and you ask God for help, he sends
you a shovel?’ or something like that?”
“Noooo…”
“Well, you will.
And that’s another way of saying you have to be looking for beauty in
the world where there doesn’t seem to be any.
And you have to have the strength to go for it.”
We drove in silence for a few minutes, and I almost
turned the radio back up when Shay said,
“I hope maybe you guys can have what you want. I hope you have a baby and then we can name
her Juniper.”
I laughed.
Juniper.
“Okay, Shay.
Juniper it shall be.”
Touching as always...I enjoy you sharing your and Amy's journey with us♡
ReplyDeleteYour girls are so amazing. They are lucky to have you and Amy. More importantly, I think we are ALL lucky to have them. Thank you for sharing, it is a wonderful reminder to be thankful even through pain.
ReplyDeleteMatt,
ReplyDeleteThis was a truly moving entry. Thank you so much for sharing. Keep up the great work!!
--Alyssa