Friday, July 6, 2007

A moment


M's gone for six weeks, and I'm lying down next to L last night, talking about nothing in particular. I love these moments: so quiet, so simple.

"Will I look like you when I grow up?" he asks. I look at him and think.

"You'll have my smile, I think," I say.

"No," he says, "I have Makhan's smile."

"Well, maybe you'll have my hair," I say.

"I definitely have Aparna's hair," he says.

I'm thinking. Humor? Sparkle? What to say--what legacy, what genetic replacement, what stand-in, what as-if.

"I'll have your love," he says, and I nod and rub his back because I can't speak.
***
A woman stops into my office today and she's been told that I have an adopted child. She wants to share that she has a younger brother who was adopted 35 years ago as an infant from South Vietnam. I admit I get tired of the whole novelty bit: L's adoptedness is invisible to me in all but the most private moments, and I'm generally not prepared to share those. He is only my son--not my adopted child.

But it turns out she's only interested in L insofar as he gives her the opportunity to talk about her brother, who is 38 and has yet to have a healthy adult relationship with a woman; and her father, who learned at age 37 that he was adopted--that he'd been in foster care with a warm, loving family until he was nearly 2, and had then been ripped from the family and placed with a cold, emotionally closed couple in Detroit who had a lot of cash to pay. Same old story.

I think that explains why he was so shut off from all of us as kidS," she said, and she started to cry--this person I'd known for all of ten minutes. "If he'd been more intact, I think my brother would've been able to be more intact," she said.

She admitted she'd always planned to adopt, but it just didn't work out: she had a child the natural way. "I thought of my brother every day of my son's life, until he was seven months old: I thought of my brother every time I hugged my baby--every time I picked him up and kissed him--I thought of my brother, who lay in an orphanage crib until he was seven months old and never got any of that love.
***
When I was waiting to go and bring him home, a woman who was also waiting for a child told me that she and her husband had requested L before I did, but they couldn't get their paperwork and cash in order in time to be granted the placement. Another week and he'd have ended up with two parents instead of one--and he'd have a daddy now. She told me this and I felt such anger at her and at the moment: this child, held up like a head of lettuce, taken home by the one who was ready first. I didn't want to know: I didn't want to be the one who'd displaced him from his vector toward a two-parent home. But I was.

I persist in a kind of belief in fate: pieces that come together with a purpose, even if you never know what--never even in a whole lifetime. Arbitrariness is the alternative, and that's too cold a cosmology for me, especially played out in the life story of a small child.

6 comments:

Anne said...

from where i sit, things worked out just exactly as they were meant to.
having two parents in no way insures a perfect childhood. love does.
great to read you again!
x0x0x0x

nancy =) said...

what annie said...

Mary said...

That child is just the best and you are a wonderful mother. In many families have one parent (who is full of love) is better then having two who cannot manage that.

Yes, mine has even asked about getting a dad.

I have missed you....

alan said...

With tears streaming down my cheeks, I can't imagine him with anyone else...you have so much love wrapped up in all that common sense!

alan

taza said...

that last paragraph is a work of art, my dear. splendid post. and love makes a home, not 2 parents!

and i quote, "'I'LL HAVE YOUR LOVE,' he says..."

:)

tomvancouver said...

Adorable picture, and what sweet wise words come from Liam. I'll get your love.
Beats genetics anytime.