Monday, July 6, 2015

16 Pounds of Magic

“Isn’t it amazing a man like me can feel this way…” – James Taylor from Your Smiling Face

OK, I expected to love my granddaughter. I just didn’t expect this. I have no idea if other Grands have this experience. It feels singular to me. And I am at a loss to explain it.

Little Tess is beautiful and whip smart. She doesn’t complain unless something is actually wrong. She has a strong sense of personal space and will not suffer over-pushy strangers gladly. She really seems to enjoy other children. She loves books and playing catch… (Ok, I roll the ball to her, but she really has an arm.) She snuggles so sweetly when she falls asleep for a nap or takes a bottle. But in the end, I think it is that smile that has me hooked…and the way she sticks her tongue out at me when we first see each other…always our special greeting since an hour after she was born.

Still, for all that, I remain at a loss to explain the unbridled joy she has brought into my life. I loved my kids; I still do. I gave them bottles; I still do…well, beer bottles now, but still... We had great fun playing; howling with laughter together, reading books (or listening to them recite them to me, in their entirety, from memory, before they could read… to my complete amazement). I am sure I have forgotten a lot about those early days, so maybe I have only forgotten, but it doesn’t feel that way today. And to be clear, I don’t believe I love Tess more than I loved them then or love them now.

I find myself wondering if it is age. I read that there is a French proverb that runs “Life is half spent before one knows what life is.” Whatever else you may want to say, it is clear that perspective changes with age. Is it the return to a vital joy after having been so long out of the saddle (of infant care)? Is it the fact she is ours; the daughter of my own son and daughter in law (or “my daughter” as I normally think of her)? Is it just that she is so darn cute?

It suffices to say I simply don’t know why, but although I may be clueless about why, I can at least speak to how I feel. To be honest, and at the risk of sounding weird, I have got to say a smile from Tess feels sort of like baptism. For those unfamiliar with the idea, it is complex. The concept of baptism in the circles I came from has a lot to do with turning toward life and being washed clean of everything in one’s past that was contrary to that…and all the guilt that went with it. So setting aside the issue of whether you buy that sort of thing in magical terms, I have got to say, what happens inside when Tess gives me one of those precious smiles feels completely magical. I think that somehow being seen by new, pure, trusting, loving eyes allows me, for moments, to see myself that way. And the residual effect is a growing sense that some deep closed place inside has been opened or perhaps re-opened. I guess what I am saying is that being with Tess is not just wonderful in the moment. It seems something inside me is changing.


Out of an abundance of caution, let me say this: My happiness is absolutely not Tess’s responsibility. Nor for that matter, am I entitled to use her for my aggrandizement. All that kind of thing goes down the wrong roads. Still, I find myself feeling changed…and shocked by it; rich beyond measure. I am lucky in the extreme. Isn’t it amazing a man like me can feel this way?