As I watch the ladies in my home grow and transition, and bicker and prod, I realize with absolute certainty that my frazzled, thirty-something mind will never comprehend the ancient complexities of how two human beings, created by the same two human beings, can be so completely, drastically different. Hank and I are opposites, no argument there. It is frequently pointed out to me that the older two pull their dominant qualities from the maternal side, but it’s hard to tell with such a sprawling spectrum of genetic attributes in both directions.
JoJo is inquisitive. She
worries and ponders and seeks the truth. She cries often, and asks about things
that people my age don’t understand or only contemplate when they’re really,
really stoned. She has concerns and she likes to direct action and take the
lead when she feels comfortable.
Spike is my wild card.
She, too, is emotional, but it’s more for dramatic effect and from frustration.
She demands to be heard and she doesn’t have much patience for parenting. I
don’t worry about Spike when it comes to friends or the pursuit of her dreams.
I think all that girl needs is a compass and she’ll be on her way.
While I celebrate these
beautiful, mystifying differences between my babies, they are often the culprits
for our sibling domestic disputes. The girls are the only players in a tireless
game of tug-of-war … the yin and the yang … the opposites that often don’t
attract. They would move mountains both to defend each other and to defeat each
other. The fights. The crazy, yelling, name-calling, remote-throwing,
door-slamming fights. About whose turn it is, or who was telling the story, or
who gets the green plate. It’s exhausting, but common. I’ll catch myself
tiptoeing toward losing it before I plant my feet, take a beat and remind
myself that my actions become their reactions. That sisters fight. That this is
life in our house right now, and it looks like this sometimes in ours and all
the other houses with little firecrackers running around.
But a shaken soda settles
eventually, and bitterness dissolves with distraction. And that’s what I adore.
It’s then I like to slow the narrative and commit it to memory. It’s in the moments
when, unprompted or pushed, they hug, or tickle or have those amazing
conversations when you turn your back and laugh from your heart, out through
tiny tears in your eyes. And my soul feels so full and I think, I love these little humans. And I love that
they have each other. They talk about the planet and God and monsters. They
solve the day’s problems and only ask for my confirmation at the very end.
“Right, Mama?” Sometimes I correct them, and more often I let their little
imaginations govern the day. Because, really, wouldn’t we all be a little
better off with thoughts of smiling moons and horses named Kiyango at the front
door?
I simultaneously dread how
quickly the time will pass, and eagerly anticipate the day when Sloppy Joan
joins her sisters at the kitchen bar. If my predictions are on point, she will
be her father; the calming rhythm that steadies the noise. I’m sometimes wrong
about these things, but I see a peace and joy in her little eyes that reminds
me of the man I married, and also why I married him. And it’s reason No. 5,986
why I love her so much.
So, this post is dedicated
to the slower, happier moments. To dancing to Beyonce’s “Girls” in the basement, and imaginative time playing mermaids in
the tub. To saving each other from the top of the slide and falling asleep
holding hands. To reuniting after school and smothering hugs. Here’s to my
delightfully different, dynamic, amazing girls and the perfectly imperfect
sisterhood they share.
Beautiful!! You have me sniffling, momma.
ReplyDeleteThis is just the sweetest!
ReplyDeleteThis is just the sweetest!
ReplyDelete