When it comes to siblings, it’s funny how
markedly different offspring can be.
Even funnier, is how shockingly similar they
are also.
With my six, I’ve noticed a residual imprint of
antics that defies all reason. Just don’t try to convince any of my kids
of that, because they are all unique. They are all special.
On a recent trip to Crocker Park, Kenny happily
flapped his hands and danced in circles as we walked down the Promenade.
Stancey shook her head and muttered, “God, he’s
so weird.”
“So were you at that age,” I told her as I
stopped Max from shoving pebbles up his nose.
Did I need to remind her, that although she and
Kenny are a decade apart, at age five, she too felt that wearing underwear was
completely optional? She may not have been a hand flapper, but she was an
amateur exhibitionist. Lest she forget the time she attended story time
at the library in a sundress minus her drawers.
Madison and Sam, though mostly dissimilar, both
have the habit of sharing way too much information. While Sam relishes in
retelling lively domestic exchanges to any one who’ll listen, Madison has been
known to divulge the darker side of living in a house where the household
budget peters out before the next pay cycle.
When writing thank you notes for his First Communion a few years ago, he
penned the classic line, “Thank you for the money. My dad used it to buy
bacon and gas.”
Sometimes, familial antics bridge from one
generation to the next. My brother David and son Madison couldn’t be more
alike if they lived in the same house.
Their trademark grumbles and stomp-offs could not have been transmitted
and integrated in the handful of times nephew and uncle have been
together. Sometimes, I want to put him in a wooden crate and send him off
to Minnesota to live with his own kind.
But then again, maybe putting myself in a crate
with ample wine and cheese might be better. And I wouldn’t require any
shipping.
To me, it isn’t strange that when Stancey was
little she was the human naked window cling, or that at one time Madison wanted
a magnet large enough to pull the refrigerator away from the wall. Now that he’s 15, he’s moved beyond magnets
and into far more sophisticated venues.
Just because he prefers sleeping in a stab proof vest to regular pajamas
doesn’t make him a social deviant. It
only makes him a little less comfortable.
Though some have outgrown their trademark
oddities, others continue to stretch the confines of their imagination to
create new ones. Last night, as I watched Max attempt to fly off the lawn
furniture with a handful of chicken feathers, I marveled at not how normal the
children will all eventually become, but rather, just how skilled we eventually
become at saving our oddities to those we feel most comfortable with.
Maybe it’s a form of denial, but I choose to
view our modest dysfunction as more of a personality perk than a social
impediment. Besides, Mayle has flown the coop, even without flapping a
handful of feathers. And last time she was home to do laundry, I noticed
she does, in fact, wear underwear.
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