Charades

Sometimes it shocks me how much other children talk. I’m just not used to how much little kids can say with their high little voices, bulleting out words, often so stream of conscious and unrelenting as to wear me out just to overhear. Today, I am struck by this in a public restroom. When I picked a stall next to one housing mother and child, and the child is talking all through the whole procedure of peeing, it astounded me. My 11-year-old son doesn’t yet pee in toilets, dependent still on training pants. (I worry he needs more disciplined parents to get him over that hurdle, but oh lord how we have tried.) But he also doesn’t yet speak. At least not in a way you would call speech.

Certainly he doesn’t talk like this little girl in the stall next to mine. She talks about the pee on her leg, and the amount of toilet paper she would like to use, and how cold the snow is when she doesn’t have her mittens on, and how she would like pink mittens please. Her mother reminds her that her mittens are pink, and she replies, “of course” in a way that is clearly mimicked, but also makes her sound world-wise and somehow forgetful.

When Noah notices a color, he says “yellow,” which means “color,” but also might mean “yellow” or maybe “blue.” Yes, he says “tired” and “no tired” and “up” when he is sleepy or not sleepy, but that’s about as revealing as when a dog sits by the door wanting to be let out. This may seem ridiculous, but when we first learned that Noah might never talk, I thought I might be ok. Worse things, right? After all, we’ve owned dogs for years and I’ve had fruitful and loving relationships with each them. Hardly. We only want from dogs what they are able to give. We want more than companionship from a child. With a child, we want to see ourselves. We want proof that everything we put into him has developed his inner self. Then we want to know that person. It’s a gift to know your child, for your child to give you more than you gave. This life? This life, well, it’s more like living in an echo.

Noah calls himself “No-nah” or “No-no” depending on the day, but he cannot say his own name. Can you imagine? Eleven years, and you cannot say your own name. Nor has he been able to learn to say 3 words in a phrase that might shape a concept for us to grasp onto. If he has an imagination, I don’t know what he daydreams about. I don’t know if his stuffed animals have names other than “bear” or if he could parrot a conversation between two adults in that way of not understanding context that kids have. “Kids say the darndest things” and “out of the mouths of babes?” Oh well. Why long for something that can never be had?

Still. What would it be like to have a child who talked? A child who talked about nothing and everything? Whose brain, whose daily life, I could have some access to? That’s the hardest thing: to not ever know anything about this child beyond what I can witness. Sure, parents are all bystanders to our children’s lives, but what if he could give me access to his thoughts, his dreams? When he wakes up crying in the night, I do my best. I guess it was a nightmare. Or maybe he feels sick? But I can’t know. When he falls, I try to detect where he was hurt through trial and error–“Is it your foot? Your toe? Your leg?” while he points to his mouth which he obviously didn’t fall on–, but it would be that much easier if he told me what hurts. No, not easier, it would be…more like mothering to know what my child feels when he feels pain. Then I might know how to fix it.

People tell me I know my son better than anyone else. And while I suppose that’s true, it’s also the farthest thing from the truth. And very little comfort. I don’t know him, because much of what I know is what I tell myself, not what he tells me. Sure he can ask, “Why?” or say what sounds like “What job?” but might be “What’s that?” But it’s not like he can tell us a story about something that happened at school that day, and ask, “Why did that kid do that?” or “Why do they always serve Fruit Loops for breakfast?” or, “Why can’t Ms. H be my teacher forever?” The list goes on and on.

Can I understand what little he can say? Yes, a lot of the time. Certainly more than other people in his world, even those who love him best. I can reinterpret his utterances, his hand motions, his defiance. I can translate his few words into concepts others can grasp. When we are walking through the grocery store, and he points to a stock cart, and says “truck” in that way he does, and looks at the stockboy with a smile, I can explain, “He loves carts.” But when I think too much about it, about his inability to communicate with people other than me, the limits of how much he can explain, declare, ask, prevent, well, I go a little crazy. Someday he will be 50 years old and I will not be alive to translate for him. And who will protect him then?

It’s lonely for me to be with him, and I wonder if life is lonely for him too. I wonder if he has all these pent up words that he really wants to say, that would spill from his lips if his brain could speak to his mouth in a way that produces words. When I ask him how his day was, and he gives me the ‘thumbs down,’ I can’t know if he is thinking over his day at school and truly assessing it, or if he is only thinking about the last thing that has happened, or if he is being silly and saying that the day was bad when in actuality he doesn’t have the deductive or summary skills to know. So I guess in one way it is good that his brain is pretty limited in its cognitive ability too. Maybe he doesn’t wish to say more because his brain doesn’t really produce more that he desires to say.

But somehow I doubt that. Maybe he doesn’t have much to say, but I’m pretty sure that if his mouth and lips could form “I don’t want to go!” or “Can I have ice cream?” he would like that too. Even if he can never tell a story, I suspect he would like to tell a joke. And I suspect he would like to ask your name, say “Good morning,” ask for pink mittens. We introduce him to other methods of communication– ipad apps, sign language, push button ‘talkers’–, but he’s so singularly interested in speech, despite the struggles, that it is his default. He tries, we try, and all we can expect is to get somewhere close. There is no target beyond almost.

I’ve likened life with Noah to an unending game of Charades. That seems uncharitable, and of course minimizes the gravity. But maybe because I need it to. He produces sounds, and then it’s our turn to do the work. We offer him options and wait until we hit on one that makes him nod his head yes. And just like the game, we cheer when we guess correctly; we may even smack the sides of our head with an open hand, and say, “Oh duh,” because it has taken us so long to figure out he wants peanut butter, not butter, on his toast. And then Noah too echoes, “Oh duh,” and laughs at our stupidity, like he’s never expected us to understand him, like he’s any other child who thinks his parents are barely tolerably intelligent. And then, very likely, he will not eat the peanut butter toast, because that totally was not what he meant. But how were we to know? It’s a game we can simply never win.

Simple Stories

It was the last straw, she said, the straw
that broke the camel’s back. She was going
to leave if he didn’t start picking up his socks.
all those socks, littering the floor, limp
like used and discarded condoms at the beach.
It wasn’t about the socks, of course, it was
about the work. The work he left her, the work
he refused to do, the simple every day
work of married life. It was a turning point,
she was proud to say: he loved her enough
to pick up his own damn socks.

Her socks lay under the rocking chair,
curled like grey slugs that cling to the bottom
of her flowerpots. She had sat up all night
with the baby. She grew warm from the baby’s hot,
fevered body. Sweat pasted her nightshirt
to her chest beneath the baby’s head. Still
she rocked, even after the baby
fell asleep. Trying not to jostle him,
she peeled each sock off the other foot
with her big toe, scratching the skin on her ankles
with her toenails, their chipped pink polish
from the calmer days before labor. Her feet
become cool as the sun began to creep along
the bottom edge of the shade, and throws
a rope of light across the room.

She didn’t have time to slave
over artisan foods, pour-over coffee,
or the right words. There was work
to be done. Always another load
of laundry. There was no getting them clean. The kids
were sent to school in clean white socks,
and came home with dirt rings around their ankles,
the shape of their feet imprinted
on the bottoms of the socks. Bleach
didn’t work. She soaked them
in baking soda. Scrubbed them
with a bar of soap. Borax. Ammonia.
Vinegar. RIT. Oxy. Dishwasher detergent.
She should buy black socks, but she couldn’t
bring herself to do it.

The dog was obsessed with her socks. He dug
them out of the clothes hamper in the corner
of their bedroom. She started to lay heavy things
on top of the hamper to keep the lid closed.
Shoes. A fan. A clothes basket. But then she’d forget,
and he would greet her at the door with one of her socks
in his mouth, looking proud like it was a baby rabbit
he had sussed from its hole and soft-mouthed to death
not knowing bones were so breakable. She pats
him on the head, says “good dog,” and is thankful
that he isn’t as obsessed with her underwear. She’s heard
stories of dogs who would chew threw the crotches
of their owners’ panties, and doubts she could
still love him as she does if he did.

Lamentations at the Tomb

The smell for one thing.
Open the door and the odor
of mold hits you square
in the face. Say you
forgot something. Find sanctuary
in your car, your oh-so-clean
car, even the lingering smell
of McDonald’s lunch a relief.
(It was a long drive
to Dad’s. Only one reason
you rarely made it, traveling along
I-90 through LaCrosse, a glimpse
of the Mississippi and glacial-less
bluffs beautiful, too brief.)

The smell is the basement’s
annual spring flooding,
destroyed drywall downstairs. Descend
the wooden stairway
of the rectangle ranch
you grew up in. The extent! Weird
enough what he had saved. A baby
carriage, Lite Brite,
one of a pair of Rock ‘em Sock ‘em Robots,
school papers and child art, wilted with wet,
stacks of books, pages dried together
like shipwreck survivors
clinging to one another,
a Mexican tooled-leather purse, an old one-eyed bear, your hope
chest. All eroded
by the creeped-in water, not just
this year, but years. Saved
yet not salvaged.

Bugs, but you see those. Sills pilled
with Japanese beetles that look
like harmless ladybugs, but have their own
particular stench if you touch. Daddy
longlegs weaved homes into corners,
fly corpses suspended. The black
and red armor of boxelder bugs
in every corner.
Rodents too. Holes chewed
into walls. Insulation seeps out
like dirty cotton candy. If you are brave
enough to look for a water glass, you will see evidence.
Of mice creeping in and out of cupboards,
over mismatched dishes, Tupperware,
weaving amid yellowing boxes of
Morton’s salt, Hamburger Helper,
and amber bottles of pills
long since emptied.

Also you see your vain
efforts to help. Not enough
in the end, or maybe since
the beginning. You hand-wrote recipes
and taped them to those cabinet doors,
yellow now with age.
A soft blanket
you gifted at Christmas, crusted
with spilled food and obscured by 
shed dog hair, spread
over a sofa. The nice television is still nice, but
the pale blue recliner you bought with your brother
has gone limp with overuse. Strangely
you are reassured
that the casket you both chose
is quite lovely, pale blue satin to match
his eyes, though his eyes,
you both agreed,
were donated fast.

(There was nothing
you could do. There was everything
you could have done. But anger, well,
its seeps and rots too.)

Here there is no resurrection
long in coming. Roll the stone
away, and there is only a failed shrine
to keep your mother’s memory alive, what she left
before
she died. He shut his eyes
to decay in favor of dreams of days
when her collection
of tea cups, washed to gleaming,
posed on the polished table, debutantes awaiting
the Ladies’ Aid. Maybe he remembers
how he would cross the kitchen
in farm boots of hard leather, and steal
one more cookie, maybe the same kind
his mother had made
him when he was a young boy
coming in
from the fields.

(You will never know.
You will never stop knowing.)