Much  of my day as a mommy can be summed up as being here to say, with and  without words, "I  see you, darling."
Whenever Emeth chokes on  his food or water, he would prolong his cough until I look him in the  eye and ask, "Emeth, are you ok?" Then, he would nod and go on eating.
When  he builds with his Lego pieces, usually into shapes that he calls  either a "truck" or a "plane," he would always come over to show me the  finished product.
The other day, as he was near tears after a  fall, daddy picked him up and comforted him. After a few magical blows  and kisses, he was brand new and off running again.
He is a  toddler who prioritizes cleanliness. He doesn't like it when he gets a  yogurt-mustache on his lips  or spaghetti sauce on his fingers. So today, because we had both those  things on the menu, I spent most of dinner wiping his mouth and his  fingers.
When  he knows he is being obedient, or kind, or when he is sharing, he would  look our way and clap his hands as if to say, "Do you see me?"
By watching and listening, I am  shaping Emeth into the man is he becoming.
We  are each a witness.* We stand as witnesses before the lives of those we  encounter everyday--our husbands, wives, parents, siblings, the  librarian, the cashier, stranger on the sidewalk. As selfish creatures,  it takes great effort for us to see  beside ourselves and look to others--how are they kind or admirable, how  are we to appreciate and honor them.
We shape one another into who we are becoming. We are given to one  another in order that we may say throughout the day,  with and without words, "I see you."
At 28, I am really not all  that different from my two-year-old.
When I conjure up some  interesting recipe in the kitchen, it is a ritual  for me to offer the  first bite to Hans. With my curiosity at the verge of bursting, I wait for him to  scoop/cut/bite his first  taste. Then, like a gentleman, he offers  his verdict, noticing the subtleties, commenting on the new ingredients, the new  technique.
You see me. And I am loved.
*My friend Serene  wrote about being her husband's witness. The concept stayed with me.
1 comment:
Let us not talk about the shape that I am becoming by eating all those fantastic conjurations!
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