Friends at church are singing the closing song but we’re home because our oldest was up in the
night barking like a seal. His breathing is easier now, energy up, but we’re still house-bound for
at least a couple days. Daddy had a sleepless night, too, with his own hacking cough and is now
trying to seek a little late morning relief for achy eyelids.
Keeping three boys quiet indoors is no easy feat.
I corral my crew and we head outside with a stern warning that it is not a running, jumping,
crazy-making kind of day. (I’m already thinking ahead to bedtime and how croup will be back
with a vengeance to steel another night’s sleep if that little body doesn’t spend the day at rest.)
I kick away pokey balls and spread out a brown quilt on the concrete slab. Boys plop on their
chosen spots, buns crunching fallen leaves hiding beneath the blanket. I pull out the Sesame
Street ABC and 123 cards from their shiny boxes and little boys delight in choosing dry erase
markers for tracing practice. (Realizing you have a few unpacked boxes, even though you moved
11 months ago, becomes an unexpected gift when kids have new found excitement for old toys
and activities they thought lost or forgotten.)
I breathe in the crisp November air and thank God for this day that actually feels like Fall.
With three little men all happily occupied I dash inside to get baby wipes for marker erasing and
cups of water for sick kid hydrating. Though my oldest is nearly six, I confess that I’m still a
stickler for sippy cups. Fewer spills just make my life easier at this stage. Because if the big one
has a big kid cup then the middle one wants one and then of course the littlest, too. So for the
sake of ease and sanity we just stick to the blessing of tightly sealed lids.
But today I find the dishwasher whirring with all the blessed sippy cups inside.
We’re outside, I reason. No big deal if water spills. So I gather four large plastic glasses and fill
them half way with H2O goodness.
“I want green!” “Yellow for me!” they shout their cup color desires.
I disperse the water with a gentle warning to be careful not spill. They all nod and take their first
gulp, water sloshing over the brim onto happy lips.
Smile. Sigh.
The coughing boy abandons his letter tracing and dumps out the bucket of chalk. He rifles
through the pile of broken pieces looking for the perfect shade to begin his pastel masterpiece.
Less than thirty seconds in, his elbow collides with his cup and water splashes everywhere,
an instant stream running toward the quilt.
Noah looks up with squinty eyes and shoulders shrugged up tight. He musters a half smile,
asking if it’s alright.
“I’m so sorry, Mommy,” he says. And his eyes stay fixed on mine.
I sigh again.
“It’s okay, buddy,” I say. “It’s only water. Just be careful not to slip in the puddle.”
He nods and inches over to a dry concrete spot.
I go back to helping Jude name his letters and reminding Eli to wipe away all his crazy scribbles
before putting the cards away. I glance back at Noah and find him wildly scratching his chalk
inside the pool of water.
Color blurring everywhere.
Fingers stained, whole hands smeared with glistening bright yellow.
“I made paint!!” he loudly proclaims.
In a moment’s flicker I feel tension rise up my neck, see flashes of watery chalk goo splattered
over exposed limbs and clean clothes. I suck in a breath and hold it longer than normal, willing
myself to think. Remember.
Remember that this moment won’t last forever. Remember that the experience is more
important than the expectation. Remember that the memory is worth more than the mess.
I let a big grin sweep away the stress.
“That’s awesome,” I say.
His smile widens and he reaches long for another piece of chalk.
Soon his brothers dump their water out, too, and join in the paint-making fun.