My wife told me I should write a bit about being a dad. I told her that generally people are supposed to write about things they know. Don’t get me wrong. I know about being a dad. I am one. Unfortunately that’s about where my knowledge stops.
My son has a knack for making me feel like I don’t know what I’m doing. I teach high school English, and I see some eighty high school students day in and day out. They’re chuck full of hormones and energy drinks, and I never know what they’re going to do next, but they’re a pack of bingo-playing octogenarians compared to my two year old.
The little guy reacts really well with me. I know ways to keep him quiet and calm. Usually my methods work pretty well. However, he can go from zero to nuts in the time it takes to fill a sippy cup with milk. The nicest little boy I’ve ever seen will smile at me, and before I can wink, he’ll give me a quick shot to the pills. I tell myself it’s never malicious, but it makes me wonder where he was hiding the capacity for such random violence.
He constantly reminds me that it’s easy to forget that there are things I had to learn. Usually times like this also remind me I’m not nearly as in control as I like to think. Like the night I was driving home from work, talking to my wife on the phone and we learned that our son was tall enough to take steak knives from the table. He didn’t know that the shiny end was dangerous, but he learned it when my wife screamed in horror at seeing his little fingers wrapped around the blade of a knife. That’s also the night I had to face the realization that there are things in my home I will never be able to control.
Maybe that’s what I know about being a dad. Maybe the biggest lesson I’ve learned or that I can try to pass on to other first time fathers is that every second can be different from the one before it. It’s all good though. I’ve learned what works. I’ve learned to look for his signs that what works isn’t working anymore. Most of all I’ve learned that as he continues to grow and change, I will have to do the same.
(Spring 2009)
(Spring 2009)