There was a bonus “Connecting Moment” after our recent deluge where the “walls” abruptly came down and everyone suddenly said “Good morning” to me during my postponed “Thursday Walk” the subsequent Friday.
I spoke before of a “universal bonding.” And I mean without exception. A walked puppy signaled, “Had I the Power of Speech, you’d have received a cheerful ‘Good morning’ from me as well. But check out my articulate dog-thoughts, communicated only via a look.”
Beyond that surprise thawing exuberance, however, there was this other fragmentary moment, supplementing my “Post-Downpour Experience.”
Here’s what happened.
As I proceed home, carrying my “double-cupped” Groundwork “Venice Blend” pour-over, I spot a young mother accompanying her pre-school-aged son, heading in my direction. And when I see what they’re up to, I know exactly what’s going on.
The previous rainstorm had left some sizable puddles dotting the sidewalk. Walking to pre-school, the mother, clasping his hand, had deliberately slowed down, so her son could enjoy the exquisite – and, in Los Angeles, rare – pleasure of sloshing noisily through those gathering puddles.
As I walk towards them, the mother and I exchange knowing looks, my look saying, “I’ve been there”, her return look saying, “It’s fun being a parent.”
We then move off in opposite directions. But not before that identifying interlude revived a long-ago parallel experience, involving my, then, same-aged daughter Anna.
Having driven 3 year-old Anna to her nearby pre-school, I park the car at a pharmacy parking lot across the street. Unbuckling her and helping her out of the car, we walk hand-in-hand towards the awaiting pre-school.
As we proceed, I note our traversing parking lot is liberally puddled, due to a powerful rainstorm the night before. (It rained a lot more here back then.) At that point, I insistently feel “The Call.”
It is time for my my daughter’s initiation into the traditional “Rain-Puddle Rite of Passage.”
It is a “Dad’s Duty.” And I’d be darned if I negligently fell down on the job.
“Anna,” I inquire, applying no pressure in either direction. “Would you like you walk in the puddles?”
“Can I, Daddy?”
“You bet. You see a big puddle? It’s a ‘Kid’s Job’ to walk in it.”
Eager to engage in this bold, somewhat renegade experience, Anna clomps in her bright yellow rain boots towards the nearest rain-bequeathed puddle, splashingly entering its watery terrain.
I am not sure why, but I found myself walking a little ahead of her. Maybe because pre-school was imminently about to begin. Maybe because I was an adult and naturally took bigger steps. Maybe because I was a Dad and therefore oblivious to… everything. *
(* I made sure there were no endangering cars around, so I am not a complete idiot.)
At the time, however, I think my conscious intention was, “Let her enjoy this joyful experience alone.”
That’s what Iwould have wanted, so that’s what I allowed her.
An unfettered 3 year-old “Splash-athon.”
That mother, holding her son’s hand, apparently fearing some puddle-borne riptide, was, to me spoiling the adventure. At least that’s what I thirty years earlier believed.
As we continue along, I hear a familiar confused-with-a-touch-of-alarm-sounding voice breaking the early day silence.
“Daddy?!”
I immediately turn around…
And there’s Anna, frozen in a deeper than anticipated puddle-in-the-parking lot, the accumulated water substantially topping her now submerged bright yellow rain-boots.
I immediately race over, scoop her up and carry her back to the car, where I remove her water-filled boots and puddle-drenched leggings. I then start the car, driving home for replacement clothing, before returning a cleaned-up Anna, somewhat belatedly, to pre-school.
I may have laughed at this harmless yet harrowing incident, but hopefully, just to myself. Though Anna was more startled than distraught, I did not think it the right moment for learning the tickling pleasures of physical comedy.
You know, it isfun being a parent.
Even when the consequences require a sudden emergency change of wardrobe.
Hopefully, when the girl’s Mom’s not around, and she never finds out.
Bravo let kids be kids, cuz it won't be long before she's attached to an electronic device or 2.
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