We beat ourselves up, don’t we? As parents, I mean. We
obsess over every decision. Breast vs bottle. Cot vs cosleeping. Gina Ford vs
babywearing. But the devil is in the detail. The tiny things.
Do you know what? For 34 years, I have been unable to hug
anyone without patting them on the back. Seriously. Come here. Give me a hug.
Feel that? That’s my right hand, patting you on the back as we embrace. Do you
know how old I was when I started doing that? Eleven weeks old. My mum would
feed me, then shift me up over her shoulder to wind me, her hand gently patting
my back. Then one evening, she felt my tiny infant arm stretch, my fist unfurl,
and my palm began gently patting her back.
She’s told me this story many times and how her first thought was ‘Ooh! That’s
weird!’ But because she’s the kind of instinctive mum who has an incredible
understanding of young children, she immediately understood that I was reciprocating.
Thinking that an embrace meant a back pat. So here I am, 34 years later, still
patting people on the back. I’ve tried to stop. But I can’t.
And hair… Oh god, hair. Just mine. Not yours. Around the
same time that the backpatting started, my mum had long hair. And I would wrap
my fist around her tresses like buggery handles. By the time I was six months
old, Mum had had enough of this, and got her hair cut short. But by then, my
hair was long enough for me to hold. And fondle. And twist. And twiddle. Even as
I write this now, my left hand is entwined with a hank of hair, twisting,
tangling and generally creating some atrocious knots. These days, I hardly ever
wear my hair down, because the result is something not too dissimilar to a King
of Rats.
But who would have said that two teeny little things from
infancy would turn out to linger so strongly? I’m sure my parents agonised over
certain decisions about me (I hope they did, at least), but no one could have
predicted that my mum holding me a certain way meant that I never style my hair
other than with hairbands. And the small things matter, as I’ve discovered with
The Boy…
Have you met my sister? She’s wonderful. Basically a nicer
version of me. She’s very sweet, kind, thoughtful. We look very similar,
although she doesn’t have my Unfortunately Massive Face. She’s also slimmer,
with bigger tits, the bitch. But she is really lovely. When The Boy was born,
she gave me The Best Toy Ever – a treasure basket. It’s just a small, shallow
wicker basket, filled with things. A wooden spoon, a sink plug, a plastic cow,
ribbons, a square of muslin, two wool pompoms. Essentially the idea is to have
a basket of things of various sizes, shapes, colours and… textures. Tesxtures…
TEXTURES…
The Boy adored it. Keep your overpriced Fisher Price plastic
tat, the treasure basket was his THING. We spent so many happy hours exploring
all the bits in it, pulling them out, touching them, seeing what they looked
like, me explaining them to him. Anything that was soft, smooth, fluffy, or
just plain nice to feel, I would gently stroke against his cheek before I
handed it to him. And then, when he was nine months old, he was playing with
his basket by himself. I watched as he pulled out a pompom, regarded it
momentarily, then brushed it against his cheek, and smiled. He’d learnt that
from me! Warm glow of Being A Good Mother suffused me.
And then I saw it happening all the time. Everything he
picked up, he would place against his cheek. Sometimes not even the things he
picked up. When he was tired, sad, or just generally in need of comfort, he
would rub his cheek against my arm. I loved it. Still do, because he still does
it. He’s nearly as tall as me now, but I can still (just) heft him up in my
arms, his legs gripping my hip, arms around my neck, his head on my shoulder,
just like I used to when he was a toddler. But mostly, anything he touches, he
has to stroke against his face, feel it, touch it, test it for face stroking
comfort ability. If it pleases his fingers, it gets introduced to his face.
Sounds sweet. But um… it’s getting a bit weird.
Yes, that’s a lampshade. A bog standard, cream, brushed
cotton lampshade. But actually, it’s more than that. It’s HIS lampshade. When
we started renting this house, it was already fully furnished, right down to
the table lamps. And um. The Boy is obsessed with this lampshade. He refuses to
sit anywhere in the living room, other than one corner of the sofa, facing
forward, left arm extended behind him, touching, stroking, fondling.
A lampshade. Rubbing it between his fingers. It’s
permanently on the huh as a result and streaked with dirt, food debris, felt
tip pen, and straight blond hairs. He rubs his face against it before he goes
to school in the morning. The first thing he does when he comes home is to
lovingly embrace it. He hugs it before he goes up to bed. He’s asked if we can
buy another lampshade for the living room, so he can have that one in his
bedroom. Not for any functional use. Just to have and to hold. He is in love.
With a lampshade.
If anyone had told me, nine years ago, that when I pressed a
ribbon to The Boy’s face, I was ensuring that his first great love would be a
Laura Ashley lampshade, I would have given them a very dubious look, and locked
the doors. But it’s here, it’s real, it’s happening.
I have created a monster.
Aw,Ilove this post, just goes to show how much we influence, without even knowing. Gorgeous. x
ReplyDelete(thank you) It's so odd! The things that we do without thinking, and it turns out that THAT is what ends up being A Big Deal. She says, fingers entwined in hair... ;-)
ReplyDeleteSuch a lovely post, you know what I like the most, it made me think of all the little quirks of my own son and how wonderful it is that we know these secrets they have.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I love peoplewatching and seeing the odd little quirks and secrets they have in any case, but the thing I love about seeing it in The Blondies is that I know where it comes from! (And I know who is at fault for it too...)
ReplyDelete