He
arrived two weeks after his due date, by induction, and he was not impressed,
yelling his way out into the world. He was a big baby – at birth he looked like
he was three months old, pushing toward 10 pounds. The nurse cleaned him up, wrapped him in a little blanket, and put him in my arms. Eyes in a little round face squinted at me.
I fell in love.
At
seven months, sitting between us in his car seat, he tried to take control of
the steering wheel. We were on the interstate.
He
walked at nine months. He walked for exactly one day. Then he ran and didn’t
stop.
At
two, he climbed into the car in the garage, keys in hand. He considered himself
an adult, so why shouldn’t he drive the car?
He
was four, perhaps five, when I noticed something odd about the training wheels
on his bike. He wasn’t using them. I
took them off, and off he went. When his mother saw him, she burst into tears.
For
the elderly neighbor across the street, he was her Jeopardy partner. They’d watch the television show together, and
she’d give him snacks.
Early
one Saturday morning, we heard the television set on. I stumbled into the den
to see what was up, and there he was, watching a golf game on television. Golf. He was five.
And
then time begins to run together. I’m not sure what happened, but a lot of time
passed between the little boy singing at the top of his lungs for a church
Christmas program and a white stretch limousine pulling into the driveway for
the senior prom. In between were hundreds if not thousands of soccer games,
basketball games, baseball games, and any other kind of game with a ball.
Like
that 1987 World Series game, Cardinals and the Twins playing game 5 in Old
Busch Stadium. We were there. He explained the game to me.
College,
and then his first job, working for a minor league baseball team. And then the
jump to Arizona. Watching him load the U-Haul truck. Watching him drive away.
Even
good things for your children can be hard.
And
then he finds Stephanie in Phoenix. We fly out one Christmas to meet her and
her family. She was scared to death. Turns out he had told her all kinds of
stories about his mother.
Almost
two years later, we flew out again to Phoenix. For their wedding.
And
then my St. Louis boy figured out a way to get back to St. Louis. With a
pregnant wife in tow.
And
then the night they go to the hospital for Cameron’s induction (there must be something
in the genes). He falls, hits his head, and I rush to the hospital at one in
the morning. He’s not delirious, but he’s disoriented. The x-rays come in.
Blood on the skull. The next day, Stephanie’s in labor, and he’s having brain surgery.
It
all ends well. Cameron’s born. Two years later, Caden’s born. For Caden’s birth,
he wears a bicycle helmet.
He,
and his brother Andrew, have taught me two things about fatherhood.
The first thing: Once
you become a father, you never stop being a father. How you’re a father
changes, but you never stop being a father.
And
the second this is, you don’t want to stop.
Happy
birthday, Travis Young.
Photograph: Stephanie and Travis Young, with Caden obviously enjoying himself and Cameron standing quietly, with a friend's new baby.
6 comments:
Wonderful post, Glynn. Happy Birthday to your Travis.
Cameron is growing up fast, or at least getting taller!
My son celebrated his birthday yesterday. What gift they are. You've expressed it well.
Well, you KNOW that I love this post. Parenting is the most amazing and the most difficult thing I've ever done in my life - and I wouldn't trade a minute of it. Not then, not now. Happy birthday to you boy - and what a lovely man he has become. Congrats all round.
When I began reading your post, Glynn, I thought it was my son you were describing, not yours. I can't get over the similarities!
And, yes, once a father, always a father, no matter what.
Happy and blessed birthday to Travis!
Blessings!
Those early years--they loom large.
You gave me the loony laughs with the bit about your son wearing a bicycle helmet for his son's birth. Did he really?
It's been said (often) that I ought to wear one daily. Grace is not my middle name or my MO.
Anyway, this belongs on a Father's Day card. The whole thing.
Blessings.
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