Arthur looked terribly concerned as his aunt started to cry. “Gugu is happy, honey,” I said. “Really, she's so happy.”
"I'm really happy,” Maria sobbed.
And so it begins again. Or maybe it began months ago, when they looked at one another and thought, it's time, or even a year ago, when they watched their son try to climb the ladder to the slide and thought, it would be good for him to have a brother or sister to play with. Come to think of it, it probably began for our son many many years ago. His brother and his sister have been a pivotal part of his life forever; because he and his brother are so close in age, he has no memory of a time when he was the only child. His wife knows that. And despite a lifetime as an only child, her newly minted siblings are an important part of her life, as well.
They will be different this time. They don't know that yet, but I do. It turns out your heart is a balloon: it expands effortlessly. Your hands, not so much. It ought to be that two is one plus one, but two children is actually one plus one plus a hundred, or a thousand, or something, depending on the day. With the first one you nurse a baby, the silence deep and sweet, the smell of new hair and skin perfuming the air. With the second you nurse a baby while the elder child takes mustard from the fridge and paints the tile floor with it.
That actually once happened. And our elder child was on the easy end of the toddler number line. Still. The rest of the year after our second child arrived is a complete blur to me in many ways. I wanted to have a third child right away — what can I say, my hormones were raging — and my husband said evenly, “You've been in a bad mood for six months. Maybe we should wait a little while.” Which, while maddening — like I said, hormones — happened to be accurate. The space between the second and third was somewhat larger than the space between the first and second. “Three?” people said. Three. It was all pretty wild, going from a man-to-man to a zone defense.
I wouldn't change a thing. About any of it.
I will be different this time, too. When I first tried my hand at stand-up paddleboarding, one of the women I was with pulled up next to me and began to fill me in on what I needed to change as I paddled, how my arms were at the wrong angle, how far I needed to push into the water, and precisely how to sweep back. I stared straight ahead and, without looking at her, I said between gritted teeth, “All I can do right now is try to stand up on this thing.”
It's such an apt metaphor for almost everything I've ever done in my life. I know how to use my paddle now, how to use it to move swiftly through the water, how to turn my board. But the beginning of everything is just trying to nail the most primitive part, to tame the lizard brain that says you can't, don't try, you'll fall.
In the beginning of my life in Nanaville, I was just trying to stay standing. I made up so much of the mothering thing as I went, and even more of the grandmothering thing. If it's not clear enough here, mistakes were made. But they were made out of haste and ignorance, lack of thought but never lack of love.
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