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Magic Tears

 

 

My friend Tal introduced me to the poem “Butter Knife” by poet Hollie McNish.

Here’s an excerpt:

 

my heart has pumped for 40 years

without me even asking and you tell me

to keep my elbows off the table to use a

different knife for butter

 

caterpillars

don’t grow wings they disintegrate

completely reemerge with hieroglyphics

at their backs

 

meet me there in this

world where caterpillars disappear

themselves and tear drops can be

conjured out of thoughts

 

we are all

magicians here

 

our eyes from the very second we are born

know exactly how to form water out of hope

 

 

 

 

Emmett is going to be a high school senior. Classes start Wednesday.

 

Yesterday, me: “Go to the school, and exchange the broken laptop for another one.”

 

Him: “‘There’s too long of a line.”

 

Me: “Just go.”

 

Him: “I’ll go tomorrow.”

 

Me: “The line will be worse tomorrow! Just go!”

 

I got frustrated—but thanks to practice, I realized that the source of my anger was not him, but my attachment to plans. I (again) thought things should be done one way (my way).

 

But, why was I so frustrated?

 

The only person who would have to wait in a longer line tomorrow is him, not me!

 

Then last night before dinner, I got honest.

 

My beautiful boy sits at the kitchen table, putting pages in ring binders in preparation for school.

 

Me, as I walk towards him: “Hey, Bub.”

 

He acknowledges me, and I continue, “I realize why I have been so upset with you—I don’t want you to leave.”

 

Tears well in my eyes.

 

“I don’t want you to leave for college. I’m so mad at you for growing up. And, I’m taking it out on you sideways about the computer.”

 

Him: “Dad, that’s still a year away.”

 

I cry and continue: “I feel like a kid who was given the best present ever, and someone tells me they are going to take it away.”

 

He meets my blurry gaze: “Thank you. I love you, Dad.”