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Posts Tagged ‘school bus’

  1. The Bittersweet March of September

    August 28, 2013 by admin

    The other day I was on the phone with my mother. My husband was out and I had just given my toddler a bath. She was standing in her bedroom, a towel draped around her little shoulders, her gorgeous, curly hair dripping water onto the rug. She was giggling and wiggling away from me as I tried to wrestle a diaper onto her bare bottom, her pudgy feet moving in place as I hugged her close around her belly, breathing in her freshly-washed baby skin.

    My two boys were howling with laughter, the sight of their sister’s bare butt and some silly game they had been playing clearly too much to handle.

    “Oh I miss those days, honey, when you guys were little,” my mother said over the noise, her voice a little wistful.

    But she stopped there. She didn’t go on and on – about enjoying it while I can or not taking it for granted – like well-meaning old ladies in the grocery store sometimes do. She left her longing hanging in the air, an emotion for me to catch at my leisure and contemplate later, on my own time.

    I smiled. The thing was, I actually was enjoying the moment, perfect in its imperfection.

    I wasn’t trying to do a million things at once. I wasn’t annoyed because my children’s antics were keeping me from completing the next task on my never-ending to-do list, the bills, the laundry, the spaghetti sauce that was hardening in the pot on the stove. I wasn’t responding to a text, checking email, lurking on Facebook or trying to perform a twisted combination of all three. I was just being with my kids, my mom happily listening in on our little version of animal house via speakerphone

    But I know someday, I am going to be my mother. (In many ways, I already am.) My kids are going to grow up quicker than I’d like and I’m going to long for those bare bottom moments with the howling laughter soundtrack. I’m going to look back and wonder where the time went, wonder what happened to those pudgy feet and smooth-skinned faces laughing their kids’ laughs and rolling on the floor in hysterics over nothing. It’s inevitable, I know this, but I’m looking for ways to stall.

    As I write this, the first day of school looms in our immediate future, just 24 hours away. At this time tomorrow morning, summer’s easy breezy ways will abruptly come to an end, it’s finality crushing. My oldest son will get out of bed, his eyes heavy with sleep, and ask to watch an episode of Phineas and Ferb, a cartoon about two inventive brothers on an endless summer vacation. “You don’t have time for that today,” I’ll say. “You have school.”

    And so we’ll begin September’s bittersweet march.

    We’ll start to chip away at the summer laze that has left us relatively unhurried. We’ll rush through breakfast. I’ll hound my son to brush his teeth while he studies his rock collection, still in his pajamas. I’ll tell him to put his shoes on three times before he actually does it. Remind him not to forget his lunch. Or his backpack. Then, we’ll all walk my newly-crowned third-grader around the corner to the bus stop. On the way, I’ll wonder if my kids had the epic summer I planned when June opened up seemingly infinite possibilities just nine weeks ago. Will he remember the lake house, the beach, Boat Camp and lazy summer afternoons?

    A swirl of emotions will hang above us in the air: sadness and excitement, uncertainty and anticipation, the nerves that cause that familiar ache in our stomachs, the ache my son thinks I don’t know about, but one I will be feeling right alongside him as he climbs aboard the school bus.

    I’ll hold my younger children’s hands and we’ll watch as the bus drives away, my son’s face pressed up against the window, waving goodbye. He’s still my little boy. But in my heart I know that he’ll return home that afternoon just a little different from the kid he was when he left that morning. I don’t want to say it, but his childhood is running away, faster than I’d like. All my kids’ childhoods are.

    As the days pass, our family will eventually fall into our busy school-year routine. Hockey season will start and we’ll be squeezing in classes at the dojo. There will be PTO and Youth Hockey board meetings, music class and homework and deadlines. My middle child will start his second year of preschool and I’ll go through the emotions all over again. The lazy days of summer will be firmly behind us.

    But this September, I’m going to try and do things a little differently. I’m going to worry less about the crusty spaghetti sauce or what’s going on in my virtual world. I’m going to open up my eyes a little more to what’s happening around me. Instead of hurry up let’s go there’s no time for that, I’ll focus instead on making the most of the little moments that happen between the big ones. Because it’s those little ones that actually matter. The ones that are bare-bottomed and filled with howling laughter and generally inconvenient to life’s daily duties, but so pertinent to the bigger picture.

    The great Ferris Bueller once said, “Life moves pretty fast. You don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.”

    And this school year, I don’t want to miss a single thing.

    This column appears in the September 2013 issue of Merrimack Valley Parent


  2. This Just Can’t be Normal

    May 15, 2013 by admin

    Sometimes I think we’re a fairly normal family. Other times, I wonder if we are fit to socialize with our fellow human beings.

    You tell me.

    Here was the scene at my house this morning:

    Everything was going along smoothly. People were eating breakfast. Others were getting dressed. No one was screaming or crying or knocking each other’s heads into the wall. So I sat down to take a sip of coffee and get a couple of quick things done on my computer.

    Then I looked up at the time on the screen.

    Then I went into drill sergeant mode.

    “We’re going to miss the bus! Let’s go. Let’s go. Let’s go!”

    Our bus routine is timed to the minute. We walk out our door at exactly 7:41, by the kitchen clock. My computer screen said 7:41.

    I sprung into action, checked the kitchen clock. 7:44.

    My crowning achievement has been that we have never missed the bus. And now we were in danger of doing just that because EVERY FREAKING CLOCK IN OUR HOUSE IS SET TO A DIFFERENT TIME! And because I let my guard down. NEVER let your guard down.

    The time on my phone is different from my computer is different from the kitchen is different from the family room.

    It’s only by a matter of a minute or two, but a minute is critical to our success. Stray just a little and despite our best efforts, despite huffing and puffing and flailing our arms, we’ll see nothing but tail lights as we round the corner. And drop off at the elementary school is something I have absolutely no interest in. Not the way I am dressed (flannel snowman pajama pants). Not the way my hair is matted on one side, sticking straight up on the other, in true Flock of Seagulls fashion.

    I start screaming.

    “We’re going to miss the bus!!!”

    This doesn’t raise an eyebrow with my 8-year-old. At first. Mostly because I say this EVERY morning. Then we get to the bus stop and 99.9 percent of the time, we are the first ones there and my son looks at me with great disdain.

    Then I scream again. Louder. I am not acting like a sane person whose child is about to miss his bus to school. I am acting as if there is a wildfire burning in the middle of our dining room and we are all in serious danger of perishing. And if I have learned anything about raising a family, it’s that the children pick up whatever the mother is dropping.

    And I am dropping a lot of craziness.

    My son begins to exaggerate his movements in anger. He’s “trying” to put his coat on really fast, but puts it on backwards, while he is also trying to put his shoes on while I am running around, flinging random food items into his lunchbox for snack. I imagine I hear the school bus roaring down the street.

    “Come on! Let’s go!” I yell.

    “What do you think I’m doing? What the heck?” My son is also yelling now. My 4-year-old is covering his ears at the breakfast table. My 18-month-old is just smiling, but it’s one of those smiles she’s giving me in the hopes that I’ll smile back at her. She’s hoping beyond hope that her family hasn’t finally just lost it.

    “Why are you freaking out?” I yell at the 8-year-old.

    Hold up. I know exactly why he is freaking out. Because I am freaking out. Big time. But in the moment, I can’t get a grip and I am barking orders at him, glaring while he tries to straighten out the back of his shoe to fit his foot in and sling his backpack over his back.

    “This is the latest we’ve ever been!” I say predictably. Me with my Flock of Seagulls hair and snowman pajama pants.

    And in this exact moment, I believe – no, I know – I have lost just a little bit of my children’s respect. And respect is hard to come by.

    We finally get out the door.

    “Run!” I yell, and I begin to run down the street in my flip flops. My 8-year-old jogs behind me.

    “Why did you call me a freak?” he’s yelling.

    “I didn’t!” I call behind me. “I asked why you were freaking out! Let’s go!”

    We round the corner and there is no one there. “See. We’re the first ones! We’re not late!” my son yells spitefully. The bus pulls down the street. We walk up to the stop. I take a deep breath and give my son a kiss on the cheek, as sweetly as I can. “Have a great day!” I say cheerfully. The other children run to catch the bus while my son sits down, begins chatting with a friend.

    The bus starts to pull away.

    But not before I notice that there is a little girl staring at me through the window. She doesn’t look happy. In fact, she looks a little angry. Then I remember my Flock of Seagulls hair and snowman pajama pants and turn to walk home. Laughing all the way.