The waves were powerful and regular as
clockwork. My children were thrilled, riding on top of a two-person
tube, eager to go deeper despite the drenching splashes and chilled
shudders. We were just in a wave pool at a local theme park but as I
watched them bobbing on their little craft, it felt like a metaphor
for both their personalities -- and possibly their lives.
Miss Awesome is smaller, younger, still
a faltering swimmer, yet it was she in the bow. She faced every wave
head-on with a triumphant shout even when she could barely breathe
for all the water cascading down her face. She urged her brother to
move forward, go deeper, catch the biggest waves. I pulled them
shallower and she glared at me, making it clear that I was
overstepping my limited rights. Had I not been there she would have
been in the seven foot deep part where the waves were strongest and
least predictable. She has no fear of adventure and few qualms about
fighting for whatever she wants, no matter the odds, consequences, or
who is standing in her way.
The Boy, in the stern, didn't appear to be
paying much attention to the waves. He was busy trying to engineer
... something. I couldn't quite decipher his goal, although it was
perfectly clear to him. It involved getting a moving craft to stay in
the exact right orientation. Even as they were tossed up and then
down he was asking me to turn and shift the tube just so. He, too,
was delighted by the action, but as usual he was focusing more on
some inner voice. The boundary between what happens in his mind and
our reality is thin, and sometimes I wonder what he really is
experiencing.
Sometimes one child would slip, and
immediately the other was there, grabbing a wrist or lifting with a
foot, laughing and teasing, but always helping. As with any siblings
they have awful fights and sometimes wish out loud that the other
didn't exist. But in between they have a sweetness to their
relationship, a friendship on top of their family connection. It
comforted me, knowing they are there for each other. Miss Awesome will
stand and defend her brother against any challenge. The Boy will catch
his sister and keep her afloat through any adventure. And I will
watch from a distance, ready to pull them back but silently urging
them forward.
Fantastic. I love this, love your writing. I want to know you!!
ReplyDelete