Drumbeats

12
A rare moment of cooperation among the four little people.
A rare moment of cooperation among the four little people.

Years ago, when I was still trying to decide whether or not to add a third child to our family (never mind a fourth), I attended the wedding of two dear friends in Chicago. The bride was the baby of her large family, the groom the middle of three brothers. It was the speeches that got to me that thick summer night in a museum gallery in downtown Chicago, particularly those of the groomsmen: the brothers roasted the groom with love and laughter, using the language and the memories only three brothers could know. As they spoke, I could feel strings of family and love pulled taut throughout the room, and they moved me. I wanted that for my boys, then only ages four and two. I wanted them to be entwined with family, to know private jokes, to have each other’s backs, to share a common language. The following fall, we conceived our third son.

Yeah. Well. That pretty picture is not exactly the scene I see every day in my home. I still have hope that someday, my kids will have that camaraderie I saw at my friends’ wedding, but most days, it’s nowhere to be found. I have three boys with three very distinct, often conflicting, personalities. Instead of having each other’s backs, my boys often sport scratches and bruises courtesy of each other. They throw video game controllers at each other. They say mean, hurtful things to each other — reckless, calculated words that I know cut to their cores and leave marks on their hearts. They fight over food, over video games, over favorite spots on the couch. It’s less like The Cosby Show around here and more like WWF. The fighting can be miserable; this morning, one brother pried a piece of turkey bacon from another’s mouth. (Brothers, I have found, fight over food. A lot. As if we didn’t have, oh, twenty more pieces of turkey bacon at the ready.)

I don’t want to push my kids to love each other. I don’t believe that closeness can be manufactured. Instead, I try to foster it through shared experiences. But I come from a family of two children, as does my husband, and we are winging it (big time) when it comes to raising four children in one household. We don’t always know how to perfectly execute “fair” when there are so many competing needs and wants simultaneously. I’ve resigned myself to the fact that I will never be able to make everyone happy all of the time. Also, that my kids will likely need therapy.

One day this week, we had a crazy afternoon. My oldest had to complete a big math project and a mound of other homework. He went to flag football practice at 5 PM. My second boy had flag football practice at 5:30 PM in a different park. After I dropped him off, I took my younger two kids to the grocery store — my THIRD grocery trip that day, if I was keeping count, and I was. I waded through the store with a hungry 5 year old and a stick-a-fork-in-her done baby, and then I rushed home to drop the groceries in the kitchen before hopping back in the car to pick up my oldest from practice. We ended up parked outside the park where my second boy was finishing his practice. Everyone was exhausted, hungry, sweaty, and dirt-streaked, including me.

I was sitting in the front seat of my minivan, holding the baby and trying to keep her entertained for the last ten minutes before we could grab the final child and go home for dinner. My oldest sat in the third row sulking because he couldn’t BELIEVE he was being made to wait for someone else, especially his little brother. My littlest boy was leaning out the middle window, using the outside of my van as a drum set. It became background noise to the point where I barely even noticed it.

Thump-thump-thump. Thump-thump-thump.

Thump-thump-thump. Thump-thump-thump.

He kept beating, rhythmically, staring out into the dusky sky, while I watched the baby manically pull and push buttons and knobs on my dashboard, setting the windshield wipers on, activating my turn signal.

Suddenly, I noticed that the drumbeat had an answer.

Thwack-thwack-thwack. Thwack-thwack-thwack.

What in the world? I turned my head over my shoulder, and beyond my youngest boy, I saw my middle son walking toward the car, a water bottle in one hand, his mouthguard dripping out of his smiling mouth. He beat the bottle into his hand:

Thwack-thwack-thwack. Thwack-thwack-thwack.

I saw the boys’ eyes meet, and a smile turned up the corners of my youngest boy’s mouth. He opened the door for his brother, who lumbered in, sweat glistening around his eyes, and dropped himself in the third row. We were ready to go.

It was a small moment, but I felt it completely. These boys don’t often cough up love for one another, but when I catch these fleeting gestures — one boy calls, the other answers — I feel the strings pull taut. I think that maybe, just maybe, I’ve managed to give them a family. In the next breath, one might throw a cleat at the other’s head or blow up his house on Minecraft, it’s true. But I have hope that while each boy definitely marches to his own drumbeat, once in a while, they might march side by side. They might even sometimes answer the other’s call, in a language they will know from their shared childhoods. One day, I hope they find refuge and reassurance, strength and love, there. For now, I’ll take the fact that they all laugh at the same potty jokes as a good sign.

 

 

12 Replies to “Drumbeats”

  1. This is fabulous. I will now be more attentive to the strings pulling taut between my 3 girls, more aware and more appreciative. Thank you for the wake-up call. xo

  2. I love this so much. My oldest two (girl and boy) were at each others’ throats when they were younger. Now, as teenagers, they seem to have found a mutual respect and comraderie between themselves. Now it’s the middle one and youngest who love to annoy each other. I agree that you can’t force it, but I also understand that feeling of wanting your kids to be close as they age into adulthood.
    And the food? My 13 year old son is always hungry. And you’ve got three growing boys!! Good luck!

  3. I love this. While my family isn’t large, I still watch my children spar and argue and it just slays me. And now then they will do something sweet and loving and I melt. The car drumbeats are so wonderful. xox

  4. The part about blowing up the house on Minecraft made me laugh so hard! My girls are always threatening to delete each other’s Animal Crossing towns. You know I have the same family you do – just 3 and all girls though, and they are all so different. Nothing like I figured sisters would be….still hoping one day they will be best friends. Until then I will keep looking for those little moments like you do.

  5. I think the bonds that you saw at the wedding are built upon a foundation of dust ups and silent treatments. My gut is most parents of large families would fess up to winging it as well. Loved this.

  6. What a vivid picture you painted of this moment in time! I felt like I was in the passengers seat…
    My brother and I fought all the time as kids. I even whacked him in the head with an aluminum baseball bat just because he dared me to as he chased me around the couch. This year he will be 45 and I will be 40. FINALLY we realize that we are each others best and only true allie and that mom and dad won’t be around forever. It may take them years to recognize their genetic ties that run so deep, but I promise that day will come! I bet you see it emerge at little sisters wedding 😉

  7. Amazing, Allison… brought tears to my eyes after a crazy morning of fighting and moments of sweet love between my two boys.

  8. Your family and mine are so similar – same age boys. Your writing makes me laugh and realize I am not alone. Thank you from my heart.

  9. Great post! My girls squabble & bicker but when one thinks another is hurt they come running to help. It makes my heart warm.

  10. Hey — I love your posts so much and I usually don’t say anything because it makes me feel like a groupie! But the other day you said something about how some negative comments only got you down for a little while and it made me think I should at least counteract those dopes.

    Anyway, I am continually amazed at how you can make me laugh and cry in the midst of one post! I’m not a cryer, either, generally. And I love love love how you manage to show parenting and family how it really is — all the tough stuff, even embarrassing stuff and yet still show the beauty and love just as much. I see a lot of blogs who can do one or the other but no one seems to capture both the way you can.

    I have been trying to limit the links I’ll click on — the amount of stuff is just too overwhelming — except for you! I don’t know if you were on PNet when Brian Z. asked about why people read blogs. It was a long time ago and I’ve been pondering it ever since. Why DO I read blogs? There are so many great works of literature languishing on my table, so much work piling up, so many things I should be doing.

    This post is why I read blogs. XOXO

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