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Stealing Homeby Donna DeSotoThis article originally appeared in the June 2001 issue of Welcome Home. Article Copyright 2001 Donna DeSoto. Reproduction or dissemination of this work -- or any part of it -- is expressly forbidden without the written consent of the author. |
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In the beginning, he was nervous and unsure -- afraid of making a mistake.
The brand-new gym shorts and T-shirt bore no telltale signs of an athlete.
No Gatorade stains, no frayed seams, no unmistakable Ive
done my workout aroma. To be honest, he just didnt look
like he belonged in the middle of a ball field, baseball glove stiff
on his unpracticed hand. Even the bright red baseball hat on his head
seemed awkward and out of place. It looked like the band was fastened
two or three notches too tight, causing his eyebrows to bulge a little.
His movements when throwing or running for a ball were short and choppy,
similar to advancing videotape frame by frame with the deliberate clicks
of a remote control. This is now his third season of T-ball, though, and everything is finally
falling into place. He is getting a better grasp of the big picture,
both on and off the field. Approaching the outfield, he slips the well
worn, faded cap low on his sweaty forehead and hollers, Lets
play some ball! He kicks the dirt appropriately, runs the bases
with ease and scoops up those clunking grounders nearly effortlessly,
with his beloved glove that feels soft and comfortable. He has learned
when to say Good job, Nice swing, and Heads
up! And he never stops smiling while on that field, for he is
truly in love with this game. My son enjoys baseball, too, but it is my husband who is in love. My
place is on the sidelines. I am the pitchers mom, the batgirls
mom and the coachs wife. He has come a long way, and I am so proud.
Through a lot of dedication and hard work, he has developed his own
philosophy that T-ball is all about having fun. He carries each rookie
five-year- old from home to first, second and third base the very first
time, because that is how they come to understand. He loudly cheers
for his team and for the opposing team, but quietly whispers the score
to his eight-year-old players, because they are the ones who care about
who is winning and who is losing. And at night he calls busy, unfamiliar
parents to gently explain how much it means to the kids to have their
parents stay for an hour or two to watch the practices or games. Come
and see how your child is doing, he says quietly, and sometimes
they even listen. When our kids were babies, my husband tried but was never really comfortable.
He worried that they would break if he relaxed while he held them. When
I needed to go on a quick errand by myself on the weekend, hed
ask if I needed him to babysit! The babies grew into toddlers,
but still fatherhood didnt come easy (probably compounded by the
fact that my husbands wife was too helpful dispensing advice,
details and directions. I think its called nagging.).
When our daughter was learning to walkdont run! and
she kept tripping and tumbling on the sidewalk, he ran to her and made
such a fuss about her big bleeding boo-boo that she screamed
louder. He had no idea that a three-year-old might have trouble eating
a thick Super Peanut Butter Sandwich without a glass of
milk in sight. He could only think of one song to sing to them: When
I was a little bitty baby, but he only knew the one stanza, so
hed sing that over and over until I started to feel queasy. Moms
know not to make a big fuss when kids fall down. We know the regulations
on thickness for a peanut butter sandwich. And we know more songs than
well ever need. There was a time during my learning the ropes of parenthood, which
I am not proud of, when I commiserated with other moms, comparing humorous
stories about things that went on at our house that youd never
read about in Parents magazine. Id describe my third child, the
coffee drinker who needed to shave every day. But then something in me began to change. While I was busy with the
day-to- day stuff of registering for toddler and mom classes at the
library, keeping up with check-ups and tooth brushing and tooth counting,
I came to notice that my kids love his singing. Long before Harry Potter
became the rage, they delighted in my husbands imaginative, quirky
stories. He did special, magical things with them, like hunting for
leprechauns in the woods, and finding cookies they left there. And then
I remembered, through the wonder in their eyes, the uniqueness that
drew me to him in the first place! Through my children, I fell in love
all over again, this time with my husband as a father. This is the important part. He has never stopped trying. In retrospect,
I see that it must have been hard to feel comfortable stepping into
the hands on part of the father role for an hour or less at the end
of a stressful day at work, and only on occasional weekends. In his
career, working hard is only part of what is required; attorneys must
also put in many billable hours. Should he decide to take a risk and
see his children before their bedtime, he must steal home. I recognize that it is his very absence at home, and his commitment
to doing his best at work, that has given me the opportunity to be ever-present
with our children. I still go back and forth between feeling grateful
for being home, and sad, lonely and resentful that its just me
raising these kids most of the time. It wasnt just the kids who
missed out during those first years. I know that I have my own idea
of what I want him to be as a father, but I try very hard not to make
the impossible demand that he father just as I mother. I guess you could say that Ive come a long way, too. We have settled into a comfort zone of sorts. This is a partnership, in every sense of the word, and we realize that we each bring different strengths and qualities into our family; that makes us The DeSotos. And thats our team, the one whose players share huge, giggling group hugs after each game. Go, Shock-waves!!! |

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