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“You Were a Little Seed Too”

Ottawa, October 2015
Ottawa, October 2015

Mark didn’t turn three—he turned fourteen. Or so it seems.

Gone are the terrible twos and the months of provocative behaviour followed by loud and desperate tantrums. Mostly gone are the months of pitting Feng against I, or saying “no” while doing the very thing he said he wouldn’t do.

Now, Mark is sullen, argumentative, fiercely convinced he can face the world “all by himself”.

Dealing with a toddler is a bit like arguing with a drunk friend. They don’t make any sense yet they are convinced they are right and completely fine. Now, dealing with Mark is like interviewing Kurt Cobain at the height of teenage angst.

“I do it myself!”

“Then do it. Oh come on, I’ll help you.”

“NO!”

“Fine, get stuck in your t-shirt then. Just don’t fall down the stairs because you can’t see anything.”

“I CAN’T DO IT!”

“Here.”

“ALL BY MYSELF!”

“Yes, Mark. Of course, Mark.”

The very same kid who wailed loudly when I dared to take a five-second bathroom break and had to put him on the bed (I never quite master the art of peeing with a newborn strapped to my chest) just doesn’t want me around anymore. See, I’m not entertaining enough. Well, not as much as TV.

“We are going for a walk outside. Come on, go to the bathroom and put on your jacket please.”

“No, you go. Bye bye. Go away, now.”

“You’re coming. Let’s go.”

“No, I go home and watch TV.”

“No. Again, you’re coming. Daddy and I are going out.”

“It’s dark outside. It’s raining.”

“No, it’s sunny, which is precisely why we want you to go outside for a walk while we still can.”

He looks like Feng when he watches TV. Completely engrossed in the latest adventures of the Minions or Buzz Lightyear, he couldn’t care less about the fact I asked him three times already to come to the kitchen and have dinner.

“MARK! Eat, now.”

“I don’t want it.”

“You’ll watch later, you eat now.”

By the look of deep annoyance on his face, I gather that if he had the vocabulary to tell me to go to hell, he would.

But he settles for the usual “GO. AWAY.”

Slightly more acceptable but again, we are talking about a three-year-old and a not-so-patient mother who, at 6 p.m., just want to get over dinner, lunch box prep and kitchen cleaning with minimum hassle.

“Pasta?”

“I made rice. With veggies and spring rolls.”

“I want pasta.”

“That’s unfortunate because you’re eating rice.”

“I don’t want it. It’s yucky.”

“You’re half Asian. You’re eating rice. Period. You’ll get pasta another day. You had pasta at noon, anyway.”

Arguing with Mark is exhausting because I shouldn’t have to argue with a three-year-old kid. Nor that I want to. I respect his opinion but as free-spirited as I am, I firmly believe that if you need help putting on your shoes and if you have yet to understand that Dollar Store monsters aren’t real, you need to listen to your parents.

“I’m the boss, Mark.”

“I don’t think so.”

Fortunately, he is also highly quotable. May as well get something out of him, right?

He also has cute moments.

The other day, we walked home from the daycare. It was warm by Canadian standards (8°C, no wind). We walked by a house where a landscaping project had just been completed, and Mark pointed to the fresh soil and grass seeds.

“What is that?”

“Seeds,” I said. “Like baby grass. After many days, they will grow and turn into grass.” I left out the part where there was little chance of the poor seeds surviving the upcoming winter weather.

“See that tree?” I continued. “It started as a tiny tiny tiny seed as well. Then it grew to become a tree.”

“It’s a small tree.”

“Because it’s still growing. And maybe one day it will be as tall as this other tree.”

I looked at Mark walking beside me and felt suddenly lyrical.

“You started as a tiny tiny seed too,” I said with tremors in my voice. “Daddy and I planted you. Then you grew in my belly.”

I knew Mark was listening. He glanced at my stomach and frowned, like when he tries to assemble two mismatched pieces of a jigsaw.

“It took many months, but you grew in there… and then, when you were big enough, you came out. And at first, you were a tiny tiny little baby. And look at you now, so tall!

“Like a tree. You started as a seed, and you’re growing. One day, you will be as tall as mommy and daddy, maybe taller!”

Mark paused for a few seconds. Then he looked at me with a look of sheer disbelief on his face as if I had just said chocolate bars were falling from the sky.

“Nooo…. I don’t think so!”

“Yes,” I insisted. amused. “You were Mark-the-little-seed. And baby Mark. And now you’re a little boy.”

“Mommy,” he scolded me. “Noooo…! That’s funny.”

One day, Mark. One day you will read this. And this day, I want you to say it: “Mommy was right!”

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Zhu

French woman in English Canada.

Exploring the world with my camera since 1999, translating sentences for a living, writing stories that may or may not get attention.

Firm believer that nobody is normal... and it’s better this way.

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