A couple of decades ago, more maybe, my son started fifth grade at a new school. Desperate to help him adjust, I steeled myself to attend a mother's dinner. I stood in the kitchen as conversation flowed in great waves around my clueless mind.
At one point, a woman asked me who my student was. "Pat," I answered, using the name by which he wanted to be known during that time. She turned to her companion. "Do you know a girl named 'Pat'," she asked the other mom. "Oh, no," I hastened. "It's short for 'Patrick', my son." A look of annoyance flickered across her features.
"We are the girl moms," she scolded. "The boy moms are in the living room." She turned away as I hastened to correct my egregious mistake.
Now comes Sunday, and my journey home from a week with that same boy, now a thirty-three-year-old man living in his own condo on the North side of Chicago. Relegated to a wheelchair that my various infirmities immediately necessitate, I sit where I've been unceremoniously parked against a wall near the gate that will take me on the second leg of the all-day journey. A mother juggles her little girl and a more patient boychild, while their father stands guard over the boy's backpack.
"Tell your brother 'goodbye'," the woman urges the tiny child. In response the urchin throws both arms around the departing one's legs and sends him lurching backwards. He takes it with a grin and lifts her into the air -- just a few inches, but surely enough. I exchange pleasantries with the parents while we all wait for the summons from the harried gate attendant.
Eventually, I find myself sitting next to the solo traveler. The flight attendant gives him directions and I look down at him. "Did you understand?" I ask. He grins and replies, "I didn't even hear him! Do you know what he said?" I explain the safety rules to him. We brace for lift-off, and then I show him how to put down his table and open the packet of pretzels. He looks at me like he thinks I'm okay, not really a stranger, and asks me if I like the movie about Arlo the Dinosaur. I think for a moment and then admit I've never seen it.
"It's my favorite," he chortles. "Because he's named after me!" I solemnly ask him what his name is, and his grin expands. "Arlo, of course!" Then he sobers a bit and says, "It has a happy ending but a sad middle. Really, the sad part starts at the beginning because he loses his parents." I ask if he found them again and Arlo shakes his head. "No, he lost them forever."
The flight continues. Arlo and I look at the clouds. He remarks that the sun seems brighter and his eyes grow wide when I tell him why that might be. I help him sort out his apple juice which he thinks tastes a little funny until he realizes that it might be because he's eating pretzels too. "The tastes combine," he explains. I ask his age and he tells me, "Almost nine," and I remark that he knows a lot for an eight-year-old. He nods. He knows.
When we get close to Sacramento, Arlo tells me that this is a special trip just for him to see his grandparents. He thinks only his grandma will come get him because his grandpa doesn't like to leave his dog alone for very long. He says his grandma is going to take him sky-diving. He suspects it will be fun but also, he admits, a little bit scary. As the airplane descends, he asks why we are slowing down and seems reassured by my answer. I warn him about the landing gear and the possibility of a bump. When it happens, his eyes grow wide and he says, "Well you were sure right about that!"
We wait for permission to unbuckle and the lady on the other side of me has started looking her phone. "Oh no," she cries. "Jimmy Carter died!" Arlo asks who Jimmy Carter is, and we explain. The lady tells Arlo that after he stopped being president, he helped build houses for poor people. Arlo says that sounds like a good thing to do, and asks the lady how old he was when he died. The lady says, "100, I think, wasn't he?" and I agree. Arlo puts his hand on my arm and says, "It's probably okay then, he was probably ready to die. It's just as well. He was probably tired."
Later, I watched Arlo leave the plane. He doesn't see me because he's so excited to talk about the clouds. A woman about my age takes his hand, while her companion -- who apparently decided the dog would survive an hour alone -- swings Arlo's backpack over his shoulder.
As they move down the concourse, I think about the drive that I took with my son yesterday, to see parts of Chicago that he wanted me to experience. We stopped outside a building with a mural dedicated to the murdered Black Panther activist Fred Hampton. He manipulated his car so I could take a photo. "That's probably the house in which the police gunned him down," my son tells me. I think about my son and the causes he supports as our plane lands and Arlo watches the buildings grow larger. "It's so beautiful," he tells me. Out of the mouths of our children, I think, wisdom doth often come.
An attendant pushes my wheelchair along the hallway to the elevator and, side by side with another disabled passenger, we make our way onto the tram. The lady next to me says, "I heard you with that little boy on the plane." I turn to look at her, not sure of what to expect. "You were very kind to him," she continues, and smiles.
I shake my head a bit dismissively. "Anyone would have done the same," I insist. She says, "But you seemed to have a way with him." I look through the glass doors as we slow. "Oh, well," I finally answer. "It stands to reason. I'm a boy mom, after all. I should know something about talking to them."
Night falls around me. I texted my son that I had safely arrived and smiled at his one-word response, "OK". Not even a word, really -- just an acknowledgment, a noise, a shorthand for denying the obvious worry that might otherwise have lingered. Once I would have read a thousand troublesome meanings into that brief message. Tonight I send back an equally cryptic answer, a blue heart emoji, and let it go.
Mugwumpishly tendered,
Corinne Corley
The Missouri Mugwump®
My photo of the mural dedicated to Fred Hampton: