Tuesday, October 3, 2006

YOU CANNOT FLY AWAY

Dear Spike:

Your mother didn’t tell me she was going to take the test.

We had only just recently decided that we wanted a baby in our lives and I didn’t believe we’d succeed so soon. So when I came home from work, Friday afternoon, I wasn’t really prepared for the news.

“There will be three of us for dinner tonight,” she said.

•••

Someday, perhaps when you are eight or nine years old, I will take you on your first roller coaster ride. We will sit in the lead car — the wait is longer but the view is worth it — and hold our hands above our heads as the coaster tips over the top of the first peak.

For a moment, our car will lurch over the drop as we wait for the rest of the train to follow us over the peak. And in this moment, I will ask you to take a deep breath and — against your instincts to do otherwise — to keep your arms outstretched above your head.

•••

Someday, perhaps when you are five or six, I will take you to the lake. It will be fall and the the changing leaves will set fire to the water’s surface. I will lift you in my arms and hold you gently above my head.

For a moment, you will glide through the air, above the water, like a bird. And in this moment, I want you to take a deep breath and recognize that — against your wishes to do otherwise — you cannot fly away from the crystal cold water.

•••

Someday, perhaps when you are 17 or 18, I will take you to the airport. I will walk with you to the security gate and hand over your backpack. I will stand aside the crowd, against the wall, as you serpentine through the line of passengers.

For a moment, our eyes will meet. And in this moment, I will motion for you to take a deep breath and — with a mixture of trepidation and anticipation — walk away, knowing that, on this adventure, you will be on your own.

•••

Someday, perhaps when you are my age, you will find a person with whom you wish to spend your life. On the night before your wedding, we will go to a pub and order a beer and sit in the outdoor patio and watch as people of every shape and color walk by on the street.

For a moment, you will wonder whether you are prepared to devote your life to another person. And in this moment, you will take a deep breath, take a sip of your beer, and — even given your vast experience in matters of uncertainty — still be terrified.

•••

On Friday I held you and your mother in my arms and laughed as I had never laughed before.

I took a deep breath and found it wasn’t enough. I was excited and terrified, anxious and overjoyed, hands over my head, feet above the water, taking the first steps on a long journey. I could feel my father next to me and I could feel him far away.

Someday perhaps you will feel this way too. I love you too much to wish otherwise.

Love,
dad

5 comments:

DMR said...

I love this! So heartwarming.

Anonymous said...

How beautiful! You brought tears to my eyes. It doesn't take much these days, but beautiful still.

One hundred million blessings and congratulations to you and Heidi. Your lives are about to change in many innumerably sublime ways. Tell Heidi she is always welcome to call me or e-mail me with questions, concerns, or simply to commiserate. You, of course, may do the same.

Tell her to purchase a book called 'The Girlfriends Guide To Pregnancy.' It is so wise and witty that I sometimes think I wrote it myself. : )

Best wishes to you both!

Love,
Carole

Anonymous said...

A Carolicious congratulations has been posted:

http://chatty71180.typepad.com/naturallycarolicious/

www.dearspike.com said...

Gads, y'all are sweet.

DeAnn said...

Beautiful. Poetic. Amazing.

Have I mentioned how lucky Spike is?