September 12, 2008

A Morning at the Museum

We were going to the children’s museum, Chips, Liam, and I, even though I knew I was playing with fire. Liam, my three month old, had about a two hour window of wakefulness in between naptimes. Truthfully, two hours was pushing it. Usually by the hour and a half mark he’d already be starting to unravel. By two hours the beguine would have officially begun, with deafening, head-turning, inconsolable screaming. This would, in turn, send Liam’s completely-traumatized-by-the-new-baby-in-the-house preschooler brother into a tailspin of his own, not to be outdone by the competition. So, given the travel time to and from, and taking into consideration that it’d be kind of nice to have more than ten minutes to actually spend inside the museum, I knew that I was playing Russian roulette in a big way.

But I was a stay at home mom on the verge, with one foot already over the edge, and I was just that desperate to get out of the house. When my friend Mary emailed the night before to say she’d be going to the museum in the morning and did the kids and I want to join, I typed back YES YES YES. To hell with the logistics – naps, feeding times, dressing dramas and diaper bag packing. I’d been virtually housebound since the baby was born, three long months ago. I’d turned into a vampire, only daring to go out at night, after the kids went to sleep. While my husband stayed home with the slumbering boys, I’d wander down the aisles of Targets and grocery stores, lost in a post partum fog, trying to remember whatever it was that I’d gone there to buy.

To make time, I sped down all the busy streets on my way to the museum, weaving around the slower cars, with one eye on the lookout for cops in hiding and a foot poised just above the break in case I spotted one. The baby fussed loudly nearly the whole way there. We played a game of cat and mouse with the pacifier. He’d spit it out and start to cry, and I’d reach my arm back and feel around in his car seat until I’d find it, sticking it back in his mouth again. Every time the baby started to cry I’d also have to comfort Chips, who sat in his own chair next to the baby in the back seat.

“It’s okay, Bud. He just trying to tell us something. Remember, babies only cry because they can’t talk.”

“He’s talking. He’s just talking,” Chips would repeat to himself, covering his ears with his hands to keep the noise at bay.

It was a beautiful spring morning, and for the first time in months my spirits started to rise. I’d spent most of March and April trapped inside our two bedroom condo during the day, trying to nurse and care for a newborn while at the same time keep a two-and-a-half year old marginally entertained. I felt like I’d aged 10 years since the baby was born. Every morning, I’d look at myself in the bathroom mirror and swear my jowls had gotten bigger and droopier than they’d been the night before. It was high time that I got back out in the real world again, got some fresh air. See, I could do this, I kept telling myself. I could still have a life, with two children. I could be like all those other moms, carting multiple kids around to museums, libraries, supermarkets. They did it, and I could, too.

I got to the museum in just over twenty minutes- record time, as it typically took thirty. I made an illegitimate turn into the parking lot’s exit drive, ignoring the DO NOT ENTER signage. I swerved around the museum parking lot a couple of times until I gave up on finding a space anywhere near the entrance to the museum, and pulled into the first available spot, half a block away. Ever conscious of the baby’s ticking hour glass, I ran the length of the parking lot to the museum entrance, pushing the baby in the thousand pound stroller/car seat/travel system with one arm, and carrying Chips underarm in a football hold with the other.

Along the way I saw Mary’s silver Subaru Forrester parked in a prime spot, right up close to the entrance. She and her little girl must have been among the first to arrive that morning. A wave of envy washed over me, thinking of my friend and her manageable one-child life. So easy. So predictable and serene. The envy I felt was quickly replaced with guilt. Mary had suffered a miscarriage around the same time that I got pregnant with Liam. Her pregnancy was unplanned. She was already in her mid forties when she’d had Grace two years before, and didn’t even think she could conceive any longer. Still, the miscarriage had been very hard for her. Just when she and her husband had gotten used to the idea of having a second child, they’d had to get unused to it.

“MOMMY! MAAA-MEEE!”

Chips had slipped out of the crook of my arm and was fast falling down the side of my body, clinging on to my clothes.

“Oops. Sorry, Bud. Hang on. We’re almost there.” I hoisted him back up under my arm and kept on running.

The museum was mobbed. Parents, grandparents, kids and strollers everywhere. I pulled my cell phone out and checked the time. We had a respectable 40 minutes to enjoy the museum before splitsville. I dialed Mary’s number.

“We’re in the car exhibit. Grace loves it.”

“Okay. We’ll meet you there.”

Chips hovered on the edge of a mosh pit of kids sending toy cars down a giant race track. My friend’s daughter was smack in the middle, clutching a blue race car. I watched Chips amid the noise and chaos, as he attempted to navigate around the other children. His 2T jeans were still a bit big around the waist. When he reached out with both hands to touch the race track, his little striped polo shirt rose up and exposed the top of his diaper, peeking out from the elasticized waistband of his pants. He finally backed away from the swarm of kids and started chewing on his fingers, something he hadn’t done since he finished teething almost a year ago. I chalked it up to a self-comfort measure, a nervous habit he had evidently adopted since the birth of his little brother. I checked my impulse to dive into the fray of children and win a car for him. Instead, I chatted eagerly with my friend Mary and stroked Liam’s hair while he looked up at me from his perch in the stroller.

“This is getting crazy,” Mary said after a few minutes. “Let’s try the craft room. Grace likes to get her face painted.”

“Okay.” I checked the time on my cell phone. We had about thirty more minutes before we would self-destruct.

Chips started protesting as I led him out of the car exhibit, trying to yank his hand out of mine and run back inside.

“I want to play with the cars, Mommy.”

“I know, but it’s so crowded in there, Sweetie. Let’s see what there is to do in the craft room. I bet there’s something really fun to do there,” I tried to persuade him, tightening my grip on his hand and pulling him more firmly in the direction of the crafts exhibit. The baby was thankfully content for the time being, looking up at the museum ceiling while I pushed him along in his bulky car seat/stroller combo.

In the art room, Grace stood patiently, smiling with an upturned face while Mary drew on her with brightly colored crayons. Chips flinched and put an arm up when I tried to paint on him. I felt badly. He didn’t seem to be having any fun.

“I think he’d rather go see the grocery store exhibit,” I said to Mary. I turned to Chips. “Would you rather see the grocery store, Sweetie? You can push the little cart in the grocery store. You love pushing those little carts.”

“Okay,” he said.

When we got to the fake grocery store, all the kiddie shopping carts were taken. Chips’ lower lip started to quiver. His nose started to run. Giant tear drops started to roll down his cheeks. I scanned the little store, trying to assess how long it might be before we’d get a cart for him. Not any time soon, by the look of things. All the little fake shoppers’ carts were filled to the brim with empty cartons of eggs, plastic cheese wedges, wooden bread loaves. Pretend check-out clerks in smock costumes were taking ages to ring the shoppers up, too fascinated with their toy cash registers to complete the transactions and move the lines along.

“How about a basket, Sweetie? Look, there are lots of shopping baskets!”

Chips shook his head and put his face in his hands. His shoulders shook with each sob. Chips didn’t have angry, kicking, temper tantrums- the only kind I thought there were before I had children of my own. He had these tragic, heart-broken bouts of crying that always made me think of the theme music to the movie Brian’s Song.

“Oh, Chips. It’s okay. I’m sorry, Honey. As soon as one of the kids puts a cart back, it’ll be your turn, okay?” I knelt in front of him and dabbed at his face with a used paper napkin I’d found in the cup holder of my stroller. He looked at me with his big brown eyes. I kissed his wet, salty cheek.

“Wait. Here,” Mary said, “I’ve got a wet wipe right here.” She handed me a neat little travel packet of wipes.

“Oh. Thanks,” I said, suddenly feeling self-conscious and unprepared. I knew there was probably a clean tissue in my diaper bag somewhere, but the bag was wedged in the stroller basket, underneath the baby’s car seat, and it just seemed like too much work to get to it at that moment.

“Maybe we should go to the cafĂ© and get some lunch,” Mary suggested.

“That’s probably a good idea. We don’t have much time before Liam needs to nurse and nap, anyway.” Just as I said it, I noticed the baby starting to squirm in the stroller.

When we got out to the large museum hallway, Chips stopped dead in his tracks. His eyes grew wide with terror.

“Aaahhh!” He shouted. “Inflatables!! Scared of that!!” He started flapping his hands, another new tic he’d picked up since Liam was born.

“Where, Honey? Where do you see inflatables?” I asked. Chips pointed to a display at the other end of the hall. Children were pumping handles that inflated several huge multi-colored wind socks, and sent them blowing high up into the air. When the kids stopped pumping, the wind socks deflated, collapsing in a heap on the floor until someone pumped them back up again.

Chips and I had discovered “inflatables” during one of those peaceful, relaxing, lingering breakfasts we’d enjoyed together before the baby was born. Gene would get ready for work while Chips and I ate cereal and bananas, listening to classical music, or one of Chips’ kids CD’s. One morning, I sat at the table with him, flipping through a Chicago Parent magazine while we breakfasted, and Chips put his hand out and stopped me from turning the page.

“What’s that, Mommy?” He was referring to a half page advertisement that showed kids jumping up and down in a castle-like blow up structure.

“That’s a moonwalk thingy, Sweetie.”

“What’s a moonwalk?”

I looked closer at the ad. What did you call those things, anyway, I wondered? “Oh, it’s called an inflatable, Honey. That’s an inflatable, Sweetie. You bounce up and down on it.”

Chips’ eyes widened. “Inflatable,” he whispered. He couldn’t stop looking at the ad, wouldn’t let me turn the page. I’d had to tear the ad out of the magazine and give it to him, in order to keep reading.

“There, Mommy!” Chips kept staring at the museum’s wind sock exhibit. He started clinging to my legs. “Inflatables!! I’m scared of that!!”

“It’s okay, Baby. Let’s not look at the inflatables anymore, okay? We don’t have to look at them, Chips. We don’t have to go anywhere near them.”

“Mommy hold me?” He pleaded, reaching up to me. I bent down and picked him up. He wrapped his arms tightly around my neck, almost choking me.

Just then, the baby lost it. He hit his little baby wall of fatigue and hunger, and started wailing at the top of his little baby lungs. Chips put his hands over his ears and started bawling, too. I looked at Mary, who looked pitifully back at me.

“I think I have to go,” I said.

“Yes,” she said, “I understand.”

“I’m sorry.”

“No. Don’t worry. I understand.”

Then I was out in the parking lot again, running for the car. Pushing the elephant of a stroller with one arm, carrying my twenty-eight pound two-year-old in the other.

“Sweetie, when we get to the car I have to feed Baby Liam,” I warned Chips as we ran. “Before we go home, we have to stay in the car while I feed Baby Liam, okay?” He was still crying his head off. I wasn’t even sure if he heard me.

Ten minutes later, all was mercifully quiet in the car while I nursed Liam in the front seat. Chips was in his chair in the back seat, happily munching away on animal crackers.

“Where we gonna go?” He asked me between mouthfuls.

“Well, we’re going home. We have to go home now. It’s nap time for you and Baby Liam.”

“We’ll come back to the museum one day,” he said. “We’ll see the inflatables one day.”

“Did you want to see the inflatables, Honey? I thought you were scared of them.”

“We’ll see the inflatables again,” he repeated.

On one of the last days Chips and I spent alone together before Liam was born, we went to a coffee shop in our neighborhood for a cup of hot chocolate. It was snowing thickly as we walked down the street in our down jackets and fleece hats, holding hands and basking in the winter wonderland around us. We sat at a table by the window, Chips in his booster seat and I in my chair, and drank our hot chocolates and giggled and mooned at each other, like a pair of newlyweds on a honeymoon. I was so in love with motherhood that day. So proud of my fearless, sweet, happy little boy, still learning how to hold the cup with two hands, and lifting it to his mouth oh, so carefully, not wanting to spill one drop of his special drink. I was so excited about the new baby in my swollen belly, ready to come bursting out of me any minute. I felt blessed, truly graced, by some higher power working in my life.

In the front seat of the car, I let out a big sigh. Up and down. Up and down. High and low. That was us. That was our lives. We were the inflatables, Chips and I.

“We will, my darling,” I said, looking at my little boy in the rearview mirror. “We’ll see the inflatables again. One day we will.”

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