I
decided yesterday when working on a blog post (which I haven’t yet finished and
hopefully will post later this week) that I had to post something about Leanne. It has been only about 30 hours since making
that decision, and she has already foddered me with plenty of subject matter.
The
inspiration came to me as I sat at the kitchen table trying to drown out the
noise as I focused on my writing. I was
doing a decent job at it, too, considering there were three of them sitting at
the table with me coloring with crayons.
As I sat with my earbuds in my ears, however, I became gradually aware of
the conversation I had hitherto been ignoring.
It’s
fascinating how your brain can rewind and analyze sounds seconds after hearing
them without actually being conscious of hearing them. I apparently had been listening to tiny
snapping sounds for some time, and when I heard Leanne say, “Oh, neat, let me
try!” I put two and two together and recognized the sound of snapping crayons.
My
eyes jerked up from my screen and clapped on Leanne, holding a crayon in a
particular way. Bracing it with pinky and forefinger, she pressed her thumb against the center.
“Are
you guys breaking the crayons?” I cried indignantly.
“Yeah! Watch this!”
What talent. She could break
crayons with one hand.
“Stop! You can’t do that!”
“But
they’re mine!” Leanne said gleefully.
“Just
because something is yours,” I said, sagely, “doesn’t mean you can destroy it. Now stop breaking the crayons and use them
properly!”
She
did as she was told. Unfortunately, her
featherbrained conception of ‘good ideas’ sometimes hurt more than just
crayons.
We
sent the kids to bed fairly early yesterday and I was in my room by 8:30 and sat
down once more to struggle over the same blog post (again, it’s coming – it’ll
be here soon). All had been quiet in the
kid’s rooms for a little while, when suddenly I heard a tremendous thud resound
through the house.
There
is something very distinct about the sound of a child falling out of a top bunk
bed, and that is exactly the sound I had heard.
I
scrambled for the door. I was across the
hall in two seconds. Lacey met me,
coming out from the girls’ room, and I nearly collided with Lane, coming out of
his.
“Leanne
fell,” Lacey said, her eyes huge, “out of the top bunk.”
I
approached Leanne, lying in a heap on the rug covering the hard wood floor and
wailing fit to die. She was clutching
her side. Better than her head, I decided.
“She
was leaning over the edge, and then she just fell.”
Steps
from behind me signaled the rapid approach of Heather. She had heard the tremendous thud from all
the way in the basement.
“What
happened?” she asked, taking my place by Leanne’s side. She wasn’t surprised to hear the news. Even from the basement she had recognized the
fall-out-of-top-bunk sound. Leanne was
on her feet by now, still crying, but not holding her side. Heather was told the story, and as she gave
Leanne a hug, she and I exchanged looks which were as much as to say, ‘What do they expect,
hanging head down from the top bunk?’
But
the real clincher on the necessity of writing this post happened today on the
way home from school. I had the three
older kids in my car. Lane sat beside
me, the two girls in the back. I was
trying to listen to some hypothetical question Lane was putting to me (he puts
a lot of hypothetical questions to anyone he can pin down – often excellent
questions, but equally as often they are silly questions about blowing things
up and what would happen if x, y, or z were to take place), and at the same
time gauging the level of frustration coming from the back seat. My attention shifted finally from Lane as
Lacey’s voice registered at a level just below anger.
“Leanne,
look at me!”
“I
am looking at you!”
I
didn’t need to check the rear-view mirror to know that she wasn’t looking at
Lacey. Lacey would not be angry with her
if she was, and Leanne’s voice betrayed a certain amount of rigidity. She was staring straight ahead with all her
might, I’d put my money on it.
“You
are not looking at me, Leanne.”
“Yes,
I am.” She was smiling now.
“No,
you’re not." A pause. I don't know if Leanne pointed to her head, or not, but Lacey said peevishly, "You do not have eyes on the
side of your head.”
Another brief silence, and then Leanne said in a sly, secretive voice. “Yes, I do.
They’re invisible, so you can’t see them.”
Boy, I feel your pain. I often feel like this. I try so hard to make things simple, but they WILL do it their own way.
ReplyDeleteIt's true. You were referring to the towel story? Yeah....that was quite the night....
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