Two nights ago Jamis suggested that I read Ethan a book before bed. Ethan is one. I can recall only 5 nights that my husband or I have read to him at bedtime.
Flashback to 2002. Jamis is four months old and Dan and I have fallen into a routine of dinner, bath, books, bottle, bed. We alternate nights. We glide in the rocker, happy baby tucked into our laps. We read 1o books, sing 3 songs and crush him with kisses. He smiles. He drifts off to sleep. We walk through a clean and orderly house. Fall on the couch and enjoy our time together. Talk about the small accomplishments that day – Jamis’s small accomplishments. We look through the daily photo reel. We listen to music. We read books. We have sex.
Wait, we had sex? I’m not sure I can even remember that. But, oh yeah, right, we did have two more kids so somewhere in there we definitely had sex. But before there were more kids than parents we really enjoyed the intimate moments. It had yet to become just a part of survival. The truth is that now, although my mind can really imagine… No, that’s not true, my mind can’t even imagine how great it would be if I just got my butt of the couch and jumped on top of him. What I mean to say is that I intellectually know that it’s something that will, more than anything, help the mood of the house. But finding the energy is often impossible.
And so it is with reading books to infants whose sole interest is what they’ll taste like and how easily they can eat them up. Poor Ethan. For books I just don’t have the energy. Directly after he’s finished shoveling down three times the amount of food as his 2 year old brother, he’s at the bottom gate of the stairs whining for his bath. Then he’s writhing and screaming as you put on his jammies. And then he’s yawning, and sleep is the only answer. And I swear, if he weren’t writhing or screaming or yawning, I would be, if not for the other two children I’m holding constant conversation with while performing said tasks for Ethan.
There’s this running joke in my family that as the third of three siblings, I have one photo album of my entire childhood, compared to fifteen for my sister. While Jen had to go to bed promptly at 7 pm when she was young, I didn’t even know that a bed time could exist. She should tell you the story of how my mother wouldn’t allow her to stay up for the season finale of Little House on the Prarie because it was past her bedtime. She was devestated. Remembers it clearly to this day.
Maybe it’s because I was also a third child that I am sensitive to all that Ethan misses of his parents. It boils down to one word, I suppose: time. I just don’t have enough time, enough me, to give him all that I could give Jamis. And I look at Jamis now. He’s at the end of first grade and so smart, so charismatic, so confident. I can see all the time that I had with him has molded his view of the world, and of himself. It’s as difficult as it is joyful for me to think about the fact that Ethan will always have older brothers around. I will never know him without four hands and feet surrounding us. He will have very little time, if ever, with me alone. I will not be able to nourish him the way I did Jamis. His eyes will always be watching his siblings and learning and morphing his behaviors to fit in with them.
“Yeah. Maybe tomorrow night, honey. I have a lot of work to do tonight.”
I lied. I had no work. I had no headache. No kinky sex plans. No cleaning, no laundry, no dishes. It’s my policy that whatever doesn’t get finished before bedtime can just as easily be done tomorrow. Bedtime is for me, not for them. It’s the commencement of my time. It is very rare that I push back the start time I’ve been reaching toward like the finish line of my first marathon.
And for a moment I felt such guilt. I could have read to him. I could have squeezed in a board book or two. If I don’t start now, when do I start? And then I realized that Jamis’s impact on Ethan will, in many ways, be far greater than my own. He is the oldest. And they are all boys. The little guys already look to him for cues and characteristics. So instead of feeling guilt I guess I should give myself some love. Jamis is amazing. Really, truly, something quite amazing. And if it has anything to do with all the time we had together – before work, and brothers – then I’m expecting him to pass that on to his brothers and make me proud. When they see him curled up with a book in the comfy surroundings of mom’s big bed, I hope they’ll follow suit and jump on in.


{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }
Are you me?! I mean, of course you’re not. But…. I freaked out at Caleb’s 12mo checkup when the doc asked if he liked books. Because I wasn’t entirely sure I’d ever read one to him. Pretty sure my oldest was close to knowing the alphabet by the time he was two….
You nailed that one. My 13 year old is the one reading to the younger ones.
This is great!! I enjoyed this so much – could comissiorate totally (haha) … one is great, two is totally acceptable… 3 .. um… I only have two hands… and now… NOW … I have 4 … HELP? LOL
Sigh… STILL have never seen the episode where Half-Pint (Laura, Beth) marries Manly. Anyone out there have this episode to share? Mom, This is a tough one to forgive you for. I vividly remember standing on the stairs thinking you were going to change your mind! So pathetic.
Phew. I’m so glad to hear I’m not the only one that just.doesn’t.have.TIME. My third, my only daughter, well, she gets stories read to her by the 3 year old. Thanks goodness he can read, because I just do’nt know when I’d have time. I remember living the dream, with just 1 kid, baths every night, clean jammies every night. Bathing is still a necessity, but clean jammies, only when they’re just not wearable anymore.