Track is starting. It will be his last time. Running around in the oval, tossing dots and dashes — as we call the shot and the discus — in a nearby field.
“Hey, I think I want to go out and buy a new water bottle,” my son tells me, all nonchalant. “I have taken advantage of my friends for long enough.”
I want to laugh but I know I shouldn’t. We’ve gone around and around with the kid’s various needs for hydration. It is rare that any bottle we have shelled out money for, no matter how costly, has somehow fallen short.
Maybe it didn’t keep the water cool enough, or, maybe, it was awkwardly shaped for drinking. It may have been too big, or too small. The seal was never strong enough.
“Remember the time you bought me the swimming pool-sized jug? It flooded my locker.”
Last year he resorted to buying gallon jugs of spring water at a convenience store across the street from school.
I’d catch a glimpse of him as I watched from the sidelines. He’d run his part and grab the jug by its handle. Using one hand he hoisted it over the back of his shoulder and turned his head to take long, slow gulps.
His technique was … unique.
Honestly, it was a little bit of a shock to me that he would rather have a double-walled carafe built with the imaginative technology to keep ice frozen and bobbing in the refreshing water all day.
He cared more about how the water tasted than how he looked drinking it.
“Hey… remember when I was in kindergarten and you started running? We all asked how you were going to run AND drink coffee?”
It’s always a wild ride taking a stroll down adolescence memory lane with this kid. His mind holds onto grievances like a steel trap.
“Like the time you spilled hot coffee on me when I was four,” he says for, like, the hundredth time in the last decade.
I don’t bother to defend myself. He’s not interested in hearing me say I haven’t been able to enjoy a coffee while it’s still hot for the last two decades. Not to mention that the scent of au du Starbucks permeating my car would tend to underscore the reality that I am, indeed, a klutzy slob.
It probably wouldn’t surprise him to know just how many packages and bits of mail I have sent through the post with beige rivulets of various sizes, depending on how high the stack of packages was in my arms versus how much of the caffeinated beverage was left in the cup I was carrying in my teeth.
“I’m reallllllllly going to miss you when you go away to college. Who will be here to keep me humble.”
I know I’m not helping my case.
More to the point, my son hasn’t moved from the spot he’s been standing. He’s smiling. Relaxed. Just waiting …
“Oh … did you want me to go with you to buy a water bottle?”
“Yes, I would. Thanks.”