It’s been awhile since I just shared with you a typical
time with Aaron when he returns home from his day group. Typical, but rarely routine. So let me tell you a little about Aaron this
evening. He barreled in the door from
the garage just as I was starting to fix supper, and he wasted no time in
telling me about his day.
“Mom! Today we went
to the mall!” He had already called me
from Paradigm and told me this, but to Aaron anything that he says is worth
repeating……..many times.
“Guess what I saw while I was eating?”
Pause for effect, and for me to ask what he saw.
“Santa!” he replied.
“And there were children sitting on his lap. They were taking pictures.”
And Aaron, who notices everything, continued. “They were shaking a rattle to make them
laugh. Is that what you would say? Was it a rattle?”
I’m not sure how Aaron thought I would know that since I
was nowhere near the Santa in the mall today, but I didn’t try to explain
that. I just told him that it was
probably a rattle and Aaron was satisfied.
I continued with my food prep, and Aaron continued with
this fascinating Santa. “And those kids
weren’t babies or teenagers or children.
What were they?”
That pretty well left adults or toddlers, so I chose
toddlers and Aaron thought that was the right answer. Now he was done with Santa and he moved on to
food.
I never got a clear picture from him about exactly what he
ate and how much it cost and whether he gave any of his money away. He was busily talking about his observations
of the Chinese restaurant in the food court.
Everything from the person handing out little samples on the end of a
toothpick to the people working there was worthy of his discussion………over and
over. One day he came home from the mall with this proclamation: “Mom, Chinese
people love fish food!” And he has never
wanted to eat there, although the egg rolls sometimes entice him.
Today was no different as he verbally explored the Chinese
restaurant. “I don’t want to eat Chinese
food,” he declared. “I’m not Korean or
Japanese or Chinese!” No amount of
persuasion about not needing to be Korean or Japanese or Chinese could change
his mind, either.
He wasn’t through. “Mom! In that Chinese restaurant area there were
Chinese people cooking the food.”
Yes, Aaron, you’re right.
He went on, making an important connection. “So I know who was in that pizza area cooking
pizza. MEXICANS!”
He just kept talking right over my laughter, and only
later did he ask if pizza is Mexican, and I reminded him about the Italian
connection, and then he remembered and decided that the workers were probably
American.
Whatever.
He was leaving the kitchen when he heard a version of
Jingle Bells playing on my CD. “Mom! I’ve heard that song the way they put it!”
And isn’t it much more fun to put it that way than to say
that he’s heard that version of Jingle Bells?
Of course it is!
Later, just as Wheel of Fortune was coming on, I was
fixing Aaron a grilled cheese sandwich……….no, two sandwiches because he has
decided he loves grilled cheese again after eating a sample sandwich in Sam’s
with me on Tuesday. He wanted the first
one I fixed him after his Sam’s sample to be cut into the little strips like
the Sam’s lady did, so tonight was no different. This made Aaron very happy, and he put his
arm around my shoulders as he said, “I love this day.”
Wow! That was
unusual. But an even bigger surprise was
on the way. Aaron went out of the room
for a minute and when he walked back in he blurted out, “I love you!”
Now he tells me he loves me at bedtime sometimes, but a
spontaneous comment like this is rare. I
looked up at him quickly and his eyes were wide, like he was surprised himself
at his outburst of affection. And to top
it off, he came over to me and gave me a big hug. A big, genuine hug!!
“I love you, too, Aaron,” I said as I patted him on the
back. And just as quickly as the moment
happened, it was over. But not
forgotten, by me! Just like Aaron
remembers every detail of his day, I’ll remember that “I love you” and that hug
for a long time.
He didn’t even need to shake a rattle to make me smile
tonight.
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