jmgoyder

wings and things

Love story 108 – Ming’s tail

From the ages of about two to four, Ming wore a tail. At first it was a skipping rope with one handle missing. I’d get him dressed and tuck one end into the back of his shorts and off he’d go. The rest of the rope would drag on the ground as he walked, ran and played. The tail became so much a part of Ming’s identity that if we couldn’t find it there would be a frantic search.

Anthony I got used to shouting desperately, from opposite ends of the house, “Have you seen Ming’s tail?” This became our morning routine!

During this period, even though he didn’t always wear it at home, there was absolutely no way Ming would leave the house without his tail attached. “Where’s my tail?” he would wail. Once, when we couldn’t find it, and then I remembered it was soaking in the laundry sink, I had to ring the pre-school teacher to say he’d be late because his tail wasn’t dry yet. This happened a few times so that even she began to see this as a perfectly normal excuse for being late. She told me once that she’d had to speak to the whole class about not touching Ming’s tail after it had been pulled out once too often and he’d dissolved into furious tears.

Inevitably, the skipping rope split and we had to find another tail, before the trauma of not having one left long-term psychological damage. Not to Ming – to me! I just couldn’t imagine him without his tail.

Ming was surprisingly mature about the disintegration of his old tail after I said that, of course, we’d get him a new one. “I’m sad but I’m okay, Mummy,” he said stoically. “I’m gwowing up, so I jus’ need a black furry one now,” he reassured me.

This happened on a Saturday, so I left Ming home with Anthony (well Ming wouldn’t come to town tail-less anyway). I searched the toyshops all morning in vain. Each time I asked, “Do you stock tails?” I’d get a bewildered response. I could have bought another skipping rope or any sort of rope, but Ming had graduated to black and furry and I respected that.

I rang Anthony who told me that Ming had been weird all day – not himself at all, quite moody, in fact. “He says he doesn’t feel good without his tail,” Ants said, laughing quietly.

We made the quick decision to give him a black woollen tie of Anthony’s that he had only worn once before anyway. “You’ll have to run out to the car when I get home so he thinks I found one in town,” I said. And that’s what we did. When I got home, Anthony and Ming raced to the car but Anthony won and secretly tucked the tie into my bag while we both told Ming to close his eyes and open his hands.

I put the tie into Ming’s hot little hands and he opened his eyes. He stared at it for what seemed like ages before he looked up at me, tucked the narrow end into the back of his pants solemnly and said, with serious joy, “It’s sooo wicked; look, Andony. Isn’t Mummy awfulsome!”

What a relief, and I took all the credit even though it should have gone to Anthony.

I wish Ming remembered these days.

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Flying into the wind

Lately, because it is the pre-summer season of the easterly winds, I have been fascinated to watch the wild birds here (many of them very tiny breeds) fly into, or against, the wind. Sometimes it looks as if they are simply standing still, high up in the air, fixed into the sky, surreal. Then, all of a sudden, they will sort of dive down, or arrow up, defying the wind and landing in the trees, trembling and triumphant.

When I was six, I wrote my first song and I still remember the tune, although I don’t remember the lyrics beyond line 2. It went like this:

My little bird flies in the sky

He’s never afraid of the wind

Of course I soon became famous (NOT!)

Anyway, I remember singing it to my parents and their pride in my trilling was reward enough. I also remember my little brothers grimacing. Brother 1 (four years old) was already very good at mockery, and Brother 2 (two years old) just seemed bemused; I think he was too busy stuffing a whole banana into his mouth, something he was very good at.

If Son were to know that, in my heart, he is that little bird, he would probably throw up [please let him have unsubscribed by now!] but I quite like testing the limits of his love-endurance, and my own sentimentality makes us all laugh!

However, I do like the idea, in that second line of my childhood song, about not being afraid of the wind. There is always wind and there is always fear, but one of the things I most admire about Son is his ability to ‘fly’ against and into the wind despite the risks involved in not quite conforming, of not allowing himself to become a 17-year-old caricature of a 17-year-old caricature.

So this is my new song:

Caught in a sliver of moment

A half grin

A near wink

The camera brings his soul into his face before he escapes….

Country boy

Gentleman

Renegade

Party animal

My son

Flying into the wind….

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