This
morning I carried Beatrice down the stairs, as I am wont to do (motivated by a
combination of impatience [she can be so slow on her own small feet], refusal
to say goodbye to her babyhood, and pleasure in the feel of her warm
sleepy arms wrapped around my neck) and when we reached the bottom of the
stairs Beatrice, as she is wont to do, told me what she wanted for
breakfast as if she were a bejeweled, fur-covered elderly widow ordering her
longtime waiter at the Plaza to fetch her tea - a minor character, soon to have
her feathers ruffled, in one of the Eloise books.
I
want oatmeal. Then mah-tella on toast. And I want milk, without Miralax
in it.
Beatrice. Say please.
Beatrice. Say please.
Without
Miralax in it please.
And
Beatrice, we don't have any Nutella.
Then
I want grits. With cheese. And then I want cereal.
Beatrice.
Beatrice. What do you say?
At
this point she'd followed me into the kitchen, where she saw her brother
quietly pouring Autumn Wheat into a white cereal bowl at the counter. She
proceeded to flip out, grabbing at the box and screaming that she wanted
cereal first, not Gabriel! Nevermind that the cereal course was supposed
to follow her grits. She lost her capacity for language, so distraught was she
by the idea that someone else was getting to the cereal first, so irrationally
determined and angry.
Before
I could say a word, Gabriel put down the box, turned to her, and reached out
his arms. She collapsed into his hug. They stood there quietly. She pulled away
and looked up at me wonderingly.
Mama.
Gabriel understands my feelings. He understands my feelings.
I
pulled out a bowl for her and brought both to the table. The morning proceeded
in good cheer.
Let
me be clear: this does not happen very often. Usually he gets very annoyed.
Usually I separate bickering children many times a day. But this one time, the
two of them found peace all on their own, a peace much more meaningful than any
end-of-conflict I might impose.
When
we sang It Came Upon a Midnight Clear in church this morning, my heart
filled until it overflowed in tears. Something about the solemn stillness
necessary for us to hear the angels singing connected to the loving stillness
that Gabriel offered his angry sister earlier.
It came upon the midnight
clear,
that glorious song of old,
from angels bending near the earth
to touch their harps of gold:
"Peace on the earth, good will to
men,
from heaven's all-gracious
King."
The world in solemn stillness lay,
to hear the angels sing.
And
to Mr. Rogers. Oh yes yes, I speak of singing angels and miraculous peace
between siblings in the same breath as a I speak of Fred Rogers. While Frances
and Gabriel watched some of The Lord of the Rings with Mike last night,
I snuggled in my bed with Beatrice and watched an episode of Mr. Rogers in
which Daniel Tiger feels forgotten by a friend. The way Lady Aberlin rushes to
his side, once she realizes her mistake! It's been a long time since I've seen
this old favorite, so I was amazed to see the careful, loving attention she
lavishes on a puppet. You felt really sad, she tells him with full eyes. Did
you worry it meant we weren't friends anymore? Daniel nods and his plastic
puppet eyes seem to gleam with feeling. He asks her to tell him what happened once
more. How did she forget him? The two of them spend what seems like a very long
time listening to each other, healing the hurt between them with quiet, careful
attention.
The
sermon this morning explored "In the beginning was the Word,
and the Word was God, and the Word was with God." The priest suggested
another translation of logos: voice. It suggests action, relationship.
In the beginning, before time, before the world, was a voice. A voice calling
out! A voice that creates, and calls to its creation. A voice that we were made
to listen for, to yearn for, to receive.
It
has been a hard few months. I have felt so very, very tired; so afraid to
listen. But my own children, my church, this time of year - all invite
me to consider the possibility of peace. To consider the healing that
comes when one is courageous enough to turn to it all - the full moon, the
quiet dark mornings, and the raging toddler - with quiet,
attentive, loving presence.
For lo! the days are hastening
on,
by prophet seen of old,
when with the ever-circling years
shall come the time foretold
when peace shall over all the
earth
its ancient splendors fling,
and the whole world send back the
song
which now the
angels sing.