The kids have been having fun making up knock-knock jokes at the dinner table. Sylvan’s best one so far:
Sylvan: Knock knock.
Chris: Who’s there?
Sylvan: L.
Chris: L who?
Sylvan: LET ME IN!!!
The kids have been having fun making up knock-knock jokes at the dinner table. Sylvan’s best one so far:
Sylvan: Knock knock.
Chris: Who’s there?
Sylvan: L.
Chris: L who?
Sylvan: LET ME IN!!!
Dear Sylvan,
You’re lying here next to me, snug in your sleeping bag, wrapped in layers of fleece, and I can’t get over how much you belong here. From the moment you stepped onto the trail, your surefootedness and powers of observation (“That stump looks like a hand;†“Those trees have smoother bark than these.â€) made you seem natural and comfortable. You’ve been like this—so much better outside—since you were born. After you took care of some business with a cat-hole this evening (high five, brother), and I said I needed my headlamp because of the gathering darkness within the towering Doug firs and cedars, you told me that your eyesight is like a cat’s, so you didn’t need a headlamp. (You proceeded to explain that your nosesight and gripsight (traction) are also like those of a cat; I really like that word: ‘gripsight.’.) You were right; you didn’t need a headlamp. You walked the trail without one. Even with only Crocs on, you hopped off rocks like a mountain goat.
We’re out here on our inaugural mother-son backpacking trip with Kari and Cole, and I’m just so proud of our 5-year-olds. You really are so big. You excitedly started to build a shelter with wood you found on the ground among the willows near Linton Lake, our destination when we found out the Mt. Washington Wilderness on the other side of the road is still closed due to fire. We were going to head to Hand Lake, a mere half a mile hike in, but you boys managed the 2 mile hike to the campsites at the east end of Linton Lake. You romped through the grass at the lake’s edge, pretending to be tigers. You also walked upstream in the streambed, looking for trout for dinner, trout you were going to grab with your bare hands so I could cook them up.
At home, you are rarely this independent. You hang around grown-ups, telling stories and asking questions, or you follow Elena around, first playing with her (“Elena, let’s pretend we’re bears!â€), then smacking her with a pillow or otherwise seeing how far you can push her until she cries (usually pretty far, it turns out). This antagonistic behavior turns me into a big, mean monster; although I know that, as a big sister, I’m sure I did the same thing to my sister that you do to yours (sorry, Aunt Jenny). Hearing Elena cry from another room often unleashes a stream of under-my-breath obscenities.
This is who else you are at 5:
I keep looking over at you, as you rustle in your sleeping bag, and I wonder what you’ll be like—at 11, 14, 23. Will you play sad songs on your guitar at 14? Will you climb Mt. Hood when you’re 17? Will you continue to look just like pictures of me at your age?
Earlier tonight, you and I spent 15 minutes staring at the star chart, despite our not being able to see stars through the trees. You picked out your favorite constellation based on shape. You chose Monoceros, the unicorn between Canis Minor and Canis Major. You asked about the different sizes of stars on the chart, and you noticed, when you spun the time and date window, that part of the sky is always visible. Next step: a little astronomy/Earth movement class with models.
Now I’m going to snuggle with you, both to keep you warm and because you’ll let me snuggle.
I love you. Thank you for backpacking with me.
Love,
Mommy
The scene: almost finished eating dinner, at a going-away party for some friends.
Sylvan: “Dad, when can I have a treat?”
Elena: “Doo. Minn-ditz.” (Two minutes.)
While we were painting our fire hydrant (legally), Sylvan and I had this conversation:
S: I’m painting the longest river in the world. It’s in Africa.
J: The Nile?
S: Yes.
J: How’d you learn about the Nile?
S: I read it in a book (with a grandparent).
Note: I’ll post photos of our hydrant when we’re done. Baby steps.
Dear Sylvan,
Today, Elena and I waited in your classroom while you finished up your cinnamon toast and fruit snack. You washed your hands and gravitated toward the touch table, filled with cornmeal and black beans (mmm, tamales). Ready for resistance, I reminded you that we were on our way out the door. “Okay,†you said. No problema.
We headed into the lobby, because Elena wanted some milk. You settled into building and stacking with the wooden tree house, keeping yourself fully occupied. When she was done having milk and wanted to play, you grabbed wooden discs from her, snarling, “No! I’m playing with that.â€
I loaded you and Elena into the double jogger, with a little coaxing necessary for the toddler one of you. We crossed the street right behind a 5-year-old girl. You leaned out and said, “That’s Julia.†You and Julia smiled at each other, and Julia told me a story about a skunk and a raisin (not really, but it was a 5-year-old’s story; it could have been about a skunk and a raisin).
We reached University Park, and Elena practically stopped the jogger by sheer force of will: slide, slide, slide, slide, slide, slide. “If I think it enough, I will make it happen.†You hopped out of the jogger and walked directly toward the 9-year-old girl building teepees with sticks in the sand, trying to avoid her own little sisters. As I tried to make sure your daredevil sister didn’t tumble off the slide, I occasionally watched your interactions with the girl. You talked, she talked, she built, you watched, you knocked down her structures with a stick, she clapped, you talked some more. When I approached you once, you said, “I don’t want you here.†She told me, when you came over to slide, that you reminded her of a much older boy she knows and that you’re sweet.
At home, you played in the sandbox for 30 or so minutes on your own before coming in to make your sister cry.
All this is to say that you’ve become a complex and interesting little man, not easily distilled into a few words, but I’ll try anyway.
Sometimes, you still say funny things: “We’re going to Mars. If we smell a bad smell, it might be Martians.â€
I love you, even if I can only get a kiss by telling you I don’t want one,
Mommy
After a discussion in which Sylvan said only God could “stop an earth-crank from happening”:
Chris: “What’s God?”
Sylvan: “A person who if he gets eaten by a orca has the power to make the orca spit him back out.”
Overheard this weekend:
S: That was my first newt.
S: That was my first milkshake.
And it rolls around again:
J: Where do I go to work?
S: Barry’s house!
J: What do I do there?
S: Work.
J: What was I like as a little girl?
S: Small.
A friend sent a set of questions she’d asked her daughter about herself. I remembered these two questions and asked Sylvan before I told him a bedtime story about two zebras (Zora and Xylophone), two unnamed bright green snakes, and two fish (with two ridiculous names I don’t remember).
Those of you who have talked to Sylvan know that he is dangerously advanced in the talking department. It’s always been a bit scary. Here’s the latest.
Every weekend, the Hideaway Bakery makes potato donuts. Emphasis on the “donut.” They’re delicious. I usually pick up a donut or a few donut holes (for the whole family, naturally) after my Saturday morning long runs.
Last weekend, we stopped by the Hideaway on our way out of town to go play in the snow. Julie was getting out of the car, and the conversation went like this:
Sylvan: “Mommy, are you getting a potato donut?”
Julie: “No, I’m just getting some donut holes.”
Sylvan: “Mommy, if they don’t have a potato donut hole, can you please get me a whole potato donut?”
A groan-inducing play on words, at age four. And it wasn’t an accident — he knew exactly what he was doing. Grandpa Tom, you’ve got competition.
Mommy (at the playground, inquiring over the small counter about today’s specials): “What kinds of ice cream do you have today?”
Sylvan: “Today we have roller coaster ice cream.”
Mommy: “Really? What’s that like?”
Sylvan: “It goes around and around in your mouth.”
Of course.
9/11/09 update: When I recounted this story to Sylvan, he said, “That’s not what I said. I said it zooms into your mouth.”