We are sitting knee-to-knee at the top of a long flight of
stairs that runs from the first floor of my daughter's Los Angeles home, to the
second. There are three bedrooms up here; two are empty -- the adults having
left for the night. And the third, where my 6-year-old grandson was supposed to
be slumbering, has just been vacated.
"Call Mommy and tell her to come home," he says,
one hand on the banister and the other wiping fresh tears from his face.
"No, I'm not," I say. "Mommy needs a night
out."
His tears, which I believe are as false as those of a screen
idol, slide from a trickle to full faucet. I am impressed with this talent.
"I want Mommy," he repeats.
"I can put you to bed," I say. After all, I had
already fulfilled the prescription left by his mother: We cuddled under the
covers, I flipped the pages of a favorite book and read dramatically -- playing
all of the characters in different tones of voices -- and, I kissed his sweet
forehead before twirling the light knob off and slipping out the door.
"Call Daddy. Call Isaac. Call Faith," he said. His
father, brother, aunt; I waited for him to add the postman, gardener,
housekeeper -- anyone but bad Grandma.
"I don't feel safe," he said, tossing a grenade. I
smiled as I heard a sentence likely gleaned from kindergarten warnings.
"What can I do to make you feel safe?"
"Call Mommy."
"You're acting like a bully," I said. My grandson
paused his tears for a bit and turned to look at me. He couldn't believe his
ears, and his luck.
"You shouldn't call me a bully," he said.
"That's not allowed at school."
I could see the scoreboard in my head, and his hometown team
was trouncing the visiting one. Then, came my next foul: I started to cry. Not
false tears as I believed my grandson was producing, and not sobs, just wet
whispers of defeat.
"You win," I said. We had been at this for 30
minutes and I was ready to wave the white flag. "Let's go downstairs and
call your mother."
When we reached the guest room where I was spending the night,
he hopped in my bed, smiling as if he had been designated Most Valuable Player.
My cell phone had already received a text from my daughter.
"How did everything go?" she wrote. "Were you able to put him to
sleep?"
Self-pity turned to pique. My second born -- the recipient
of decades of my love and devotion -- had predicted I'd encounter difficulty in
putting her own second born to bed. She knew I was fresh at this, having lived
in different cities for all of his young years. Why had she not warned me? Why
had she allowed me to enter the game like a player without proper headgear?
I returned her text: "I failed. He wants you
home."
"On my way," she sent back.
When I turned to tell him the good news, he was fast asleep
on my bed. His mother arrived, shook her head, and then carried him upstairs.
The next morning, my grandson and I greeted each other
warily. Instead of pouting, I opted to put the previous night's episode behind
me. "What would you like for breakfast?" I asked, kissing the top of
his head. "We have Cheerios, or if you prefer, waffles." I was acting
Diner Waitress in a game we often played.
"Cheerios," he said, evidently also eager to erase
our evening dust-up.
The next day after I returned to my Los Angeles apartment,
my daughter phoned. "He said you called him a bully and that you cried."
"True and true," I said.
"You shouldn't have done either," she said.
"I was unprepared," I said. "I didn't plan my
reaction and couldn't help my tears."
"You're the adult," she said. "You should've
known better."
My shoulders sunk as I felt another round slipping away.
"I'm sorry," I said. "I wish it had turned out
differently."
That evening, I sent my daughter a text. "How about I
come over early tomorrow and give him breakfast? You can sleep in."
"That would be lovely," she typed back. We were
not opponents after all. Obviously, the three of us had regretted our actions,
words, and wounds, but remain deeply attached.
Now, because my daughter is an award-winning TV writer and director, the unfortunate scene just described could possibly be fictionalized
and turn up in one of her episodes. Luckily, I can first report it here, from
my POV.
So score one for grandmas -- good, bad, and somewhere in between.
What do those modern-day mom's know, she turned out ok.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Bro!
Deletethere is a current 2nd city skit...the show now, you should see. to see adults acting like children and visa versa. and life in between..
DeleteThanks, Helen.
Delete"Ouch" 'Been there, myself. That's when I wonder if the stricter, meaner moms get the better deal. Then again, look at what wonderful children we grew. And how proud of them we are. We know they love us when they can trust us to tell us whatever, not worrying that we will leave them....Why don't I want to say "thank you"? The plight of the Jewish Mother?
ReplyDeleteThanks, Linda!
DeleteI LOVE this. Fuck those asshole kids who ruin our date nights.
ReplyDeleteAnd you are....?
DeleteYou can come take care of my kids any time. You didn't call him a bully. You told him he was acting like one. Heaven forbid we make kids responsible for their actions and learn to read social cues.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Polly.
ReplyDelete