Thursday, January 8, 2015

34

I think every young elementary school kid had that assignment that asked, “what do you want to be when you grow up?”



Although only six or seven at the time, I clearly remember the seemingly simple assignment and the ease at which I provided my answer.

“A Poet,” I wrote simply.

Influenced by the antique poetry books of James Whitcomb Riley and other lyrical ghosts that my aunt Judy would often send to me, I wanted to evoke the same metre and rhyme that danced from my precious pages.

Looking back, I imagine my teacher must have had a good chuckle at my response. Most of the other kids my age likely answered more predictably and realistically with responses like “Dr,” “Teacher,” “Lawyer” or “Father/Mother.” There was no practicality in wanting to be a poet. But then, was there any practicality in asking a six year old kid what they wanted to be when they grew up?

I had not thought much about that assignment or my answer until recently. Events that had transpired over the last year and another impending birthday had resurrected the question and caused it to roam aimlessly through my head like a novice game of Pac-Man.

In no mood to answer, I tried to muffle the increasing volume at which the questions of “what do you want to be when you grow up” and “are you who you wanted to be when you grew up” were sounding through my head. But if I had been successful at quieting the annoying chatter before, the questions began to blare with a deafening pitch following Christmas.

As a Christmas gift to my parents, my sister had converted our old home VHS tapes into DVDs. We excitedly rushed into the living room with the prospect of watching our younger selves at dance recitals, sporting matches, school events and other big and small life happenings.  And as the younger versions of our selves suddenly flashed across the screens, we squealed with delight. We laughed often throughout the viewing as we teased each other about bad haircuts, embarrassing outfits, and overall silly behavior.

Mostly, though, we marveled at the passing of time.

“It seems like yesterday.”

“I remember that day so vividly.”

“I can’t believe how long ago that was.”   

The most memorable video would become a scene from a past Christmas. At first glance, there was nothing out of the ordinary. My siblings and I appeared to be fairly young and there was the typical and excited chaos that accompanied every childhood Christmas. A shot of my brother as a newborn, the youngest of the four of us, revealed that he had been born just barely a month before the video was taken.

Eventually, the camera panned to and settled on my father. Amidst the chaos of wrapping paper and four squealing kids, he sat, laser-focused, while playing with our new Nintendo console. He looked like a kid himself as he frantically pushed the buttons on his controller.

“Always such a kid,” I laughed as we watched him desperately trying to beat Super Mario Brothers.

As I muttered those words, I suddenly wondered exactly how old my father was during this particular Christmas. I darted my focus to the small time seal on the bottom portion of the screen. After struggling and straining my eyes for a moment, the lettering slowly came into focus: December 25, 1988.

Quickly, I did my own math.  I was seven; an aspiring poet.

Next, my father.

Subtract the difference in years. How old was my dad again now? Subtract the difference from that number…

“THIRTY-FOUR!” I gasped.

“Huh?” my father looked at me quizzically.

“You were thirty-four in this video, the age I will be in just over a month!”

Even as I said it aloud, it didn’t seem right. Sure he looked young, but the man in the home movie was a FATHER; he had FOUR kids. He couldn’t be the same age as the “about to be 34 year-old, un-married, no-kids” me that was presently watching.

After blurting out my realization, my father and I glanced at each other silently. Typically someone who could read my father in a single look, I couldn’t translate what lie hidden behind his unfamiliar expression. I hardly know what I was feeling, for that matter.

But as I watched my seven-year-old-poet-aspiring self dance around my thirty-four year old father, I couldn’t help but wonder about the person I had become. I couldn’t help but ask myself if I was who I had imagined I would be.

Aside from wanting to be a “Poet,” I am not sure what else I would have imagined “thirty-four” to be if you had asked me during this very Christmas video.  I probably would have assumed it to look much like my father’s life.

 Professional.

Wife.

Parent.

 Given those simplistic terms and convenient definitions, I certainly was not living up to my thirty-four year-old potential as I was at best today, only one of those.  But of course, I have realized life is far more complicated than that and we are far more than simply “what we want to be when we grow up.”

What my father was at thirty-four was more than simply a lawyer, husband and father as well. He was a sports nut, a prankster, a friend, an athlete, a dreamer, and many other aspirations that probably lived quietly and with hopefulness in his soul.  And though he was an adult by all definitions and a father of four, he was still a kid at his core. Amidst the chaos of professionalism, marriage, children and all the responsibilities that those entail, he was still a young guy, probably asking himself if this is what he imagined thirty-four would look like.

Just two kids...

As I ponder further about “who” I am today and what my “thirty-four” holds, I can’t help but be grateful for this journey and content with where it has taken me. While my profession is not a “poet” per se, I don’t think my seven-year old self had it all wrong. Life in all its madness, love, suffering, joy, unpredictability, humor and mystery IS poetry, and I am the poet of my own story; a story that I am still penning. It isn’t always pretty and it is not always what I imagine and hope it will be, but it is mine.  And so, as I enter “thirty-four,” I borrow the thoughts of my old friend, James Whitcomb Riley, and with intention "and with dreams my own, I wander as it leads."