Category Archives: parenting

Giving Space

Raising children is not for the timid. I don’t think any parent would dispute that.

It is also not for those who are unwilling to learn and grow in order to be a better parent. As a dad, I know that I have a lot of room for improvement, and Michael is giving me plenty of opportunity for that.

In light of that, I’ve discovered that one annoying tendency I have is removing Michael’s options.

When Michael is faced with a choice and I know he’s going to make a bad one, my usual move is to step in and choose for him to prevent him from making a mistake. For example: I’ll let him know it’s bedtime in five minutes, then one minute, and then now. If he doesn’t come with me, I’ll just go pick him up and haul him off rather than letting him know that he has a choice to make: behave, or not – and each comes with consequences. Or when he’s playing with something that belongs to a sister, rather than ask him to put it down and giving him the space to make a good decision, I’ll just take it away.
While this does save the outcome of the immediate, it is actually not helpful. I would go so far as to say it’s harmful.

He needs to be able to choose. He needs to have the opportunity to choose and to learn from the outcome of his choice. When I take that choice away from him, I also take away the learning. He doesn’t develop the pathways in his brain that help him learn from his mistakes, and thus he can’t grow effectively in that regard.

So what I am having to learn at my advanced age is to stand back and allow some things to proceed, even if I know the outcome will not be pretty. Of course I’ll be sure to prevent injury to life and limb: in those times I’ll step in and guide. This is a tough thing to learn. very tough.

Oprah is Not My Friend

On Thursday, Michael and I happened to be watching the news while he was finishing up breakfast.

On comes a commercial for an upcoming Oprah show.

It shows a video recording of a little boy storming around a house in a screaming rage, while Oprah’s voice intones ominously: “…seven years old, he tried to kill his OWN MOTHERRRRRRRRR….

That’s all Michael needed to hear.

I had to spend the next hour or so inventing from whole cloth explanations as to why the little boy was angry, who he was, what happened to his mom, how he got better, what was wrong in his head, when it happened, and whether he’d some day show up on our doorstep screaming and wielding a knife.

Later that day, after school, I had to go through the explanations again. He brought it up to his mom, and I had to explain to her what the commercial was about, and how deeply those fifteen some odd seconds of airplay affected our son.

That night we prayed extra hard for happy thoughts and protection from evil.

Friday morning, Michael came into our room at 4:00 sniffling and weeping about a bad dream he had. He wasn’t tremendously coherent at that point, and we weren’t able to get out of him exactly what he’d dreamt about, but I knew it was likely born of what he’d seen and heard the day before.

He had a pretty good day Friday, but by the evening he was once again concerned about his mommy’s safety and about his own overwhelming emotions in general.

This morning, once again, he came into our room way too early, crying and snuffling about another bad dream, something concerning his mother and his classmates having to go away.

“I should ship Michael off to Oprah so she can soothe away his nightmares,” I said.

Anyone know her address?

Progress

Not long ago, I posted an update on our continuing efforts to help Michael succeed, socially and academically. You can read about that here.

I am very happy to report that after five weeks, we’ve seen a marked improvement in Michael’s behavior at school.

Before, I would get a phone call from the principal at LEAST twice a week. Now, she has no reason to call.

Before, Michael’s school day report would show one or two smiley faces out of a possible six. Now, he gets five or six.

Before, the notes that would come home would talk about how Michael cried all day or refused to do his work. Now, we get notes coming home saying that he did well at writing workshop and did his math work.

What’s really changed is his ability to control himself enough to stop his mischievous impulses and to make better choices.

I have to say, I think the Concerta is helping a lot.

A doctor or pharmacist might describe its effect on neurons and serotonin and stuff, with all clinical terminology. Meanwhile, in my mind I’m thinking:

As I’d said before, the point of medication isn’t to calm him down or turn him into a zombie.

It’s to provide just enough extra boost to his own ability to enable him to control himself. That’s all.

He’s just as random, loud, joyful, energetic, exploratory, relentless, exuberant and expressive as he’s always been.

Only now he can be all that when he wants to, and keep it contained when he needs to.

Alphabet Soup

We have an official diagnosis, and a pathway to wellness.

The story begins quite a while ago, and most recently came to the fore when Michael began Kindergarten. Read about that here.

Every day there’s something. Michael doesn’t do his work. Michael isn’t paying attention. Michael is mixing it up with the other kids. Michael is crying and refuses to be comforted. Michael is wandering the halls instead of playing outside at recess.

Every day the reports come home, every day I have to talk with him about what behavior is acceptable and what isn’t.

In the space of three months I’ve been called by the principal more times than I would have ever expected to spanning my career as a parent. Her calls usually go the same way: Michael’s in her office, Michael did this or that, she just doesn’t know what to do, she might have to suspend him, and do I have any suggestions (well, I’d suggest we get another principal, like the guy we had before, but…)? Some times she tells me I have to come get him. Like I don’t have work to do or anything. And didn’t she say that they were the experts, that they know what’s best for our child? I have my doubts.

His mom and I want to nip this in the bud. We do not want our child to be labeled “The Troublemaker” or “The Bad Kid”. He may end up believing it himself.

We have had many meetings with Michael’s teacher. We have had many meetings with the school psychologist and the school counselor. We have worked out plans and shared ideas and thoughts and anecdotes. The school psychologist suggested that Michael was autistic. This, because she saw him run on his tiptoes once. Once.

In addition to all of this, Michael has been seeing an independent psychologist every week. This has been where we’ve made the most progress.

She has diagnosed Michael with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder and perhaps a touch of Oppositional Defiance Disorder. ADHD, OCD, ODD. A lot of Ds going on there.

She suggested a first-level medication to help with that, so his pediatrician prescribed Concerta.

In case there are those who aren’t familiar with ADHD or the medications prescribed for it, let me provide a little insight. Concerta, like Ritalin and others, is a brain stimulant. The theory is that kids with ADHD (or ADD) are deficient in the level of internal stimulation their brains are receiving naturally. This makes them easily bored and distracted as they seek external stimulation, to “feed the need”. The Concerta helps boost the internal stimulation level, allowing them to control themselves and not seek so much external stimulation. Contrary to popular belief, medications like this are not depressants; they don’t act to slow a kid down.

Anyway, Michael has been on Concerta for a week now. And he’s been visiting the psychologist for four weeks, and his mom and I are getting some training in how best to interact with him when he gets into certain behavioral states: how to ignore tantrums, how to field repetitive questions, how to praise those behavior traits we like to see, and how to help extinguish those we don’t.

We’ve all learned a ton in this time.

And while we can’t say Michael’s cured, we can see some improvement. There have been ups and downs, but overall it’s looking good.

Time will tell, but I’m willing to take the small victories and keep making the baby steps toward wellness.

Connection

This morning I saw an ad for the Windows Phone, and it disturbed me deeply.

The point of this commercial was that with this new phone, you won’t spend as much time sending text messages. The action in the background showed various people going about everyday tasks, but completely absorbed in texting, to the exclusion of everything else: a wedding, a baseball game, their kids, driving, etc. The message is clear: we need something to rescue us from the horrible burden that is text messaging.

Really?

So, we’re supposed to believe that we are all suffering from this duty that’s been placed upon us, this incessant mission we are all on, this mandate to chronicle our every waking moment to everyone. And it’s grown beyond being a mere necessity, it’s become troublesome. Thus, what we need is a new phone that will somehow make our texting experience more efficient.

I have a better, far less costly idea: turn the #$%*@! thing off!

I know, I know: Get off my lawn.

But really: is it so difficult to go through a day without having that stupid thing constantly yapping at you, demanding your unwavering attention and obligating you to report? Is it no longer expected that we enjoy our present surroundings and the company of those we’re actually with?

Last summer, while at an open-air restaurant enjoying the late afternoon sun and good company, I caught my stepdaughter buried in her cell phone texting a friend, and she made a gripe that she wished the texts would stop coming in, because they were bugging her. I told her she could turn it off. She looked at me like I was out of my mind.

“Why would I do that?” She asked. “What if I needed to get a hold of someone?”

“Like who? And why?” I challenged.

“I don’t know. Don’t you ever need to talk to someone?”

“Everyone I want to talk to, right at this moment, is already here,” I said, ending the subject.

I believe our society is in imminent danger of losing our ability to relate to one another. Lasting, solid relationships cannot be built out of or sustained by 140 character micro-thoughts.

In the movie “Contact,” the character Palmer Joss said: “…We shop at home, we surf the Web, and at the same time we feel emptier, lonelier, and more cut off from each other than at any other time in human history…”

So true. So very true. And, from a movie released in 1997, when the web was still a curiosity, texting was rarely done and twitter didn’t exist.

All this technology we have for keeping tabs on people, for keeping connected with them, is actually doing the opposite. It’s reducing our connectivity to a trivial level.

I don’t think this problem originated with the advent of the cell phone. Somebody probably sneered at the invention of the telegraph citing a similar concern. The television certainly contributed to the problem as well, as did the home video recorder. Remember when the holiday television specials came on TV one day a year, and if you missed it, you missed it? It made it an event. You all had to be there and pay rapt attention. And there wasn’t a pause button so you could run to the bathroom; you had to wait for the Dolly Madison commercial (yes, I am thinking of “A Charlie Brown Christmas”, since you ask).

Same thing with phone calls. I remember, as a boy, several times when we were expecting a long distance call from a relative at a certain time. It was exciting, and we all had to gather around the phone (no, it wasn’t wall mounted and made of oak and cast iron) to get our turn to talk to aunt whomever. The conversation was something to be anticipated, savored, and remembered. Do we have that anymore? Do we anticipate an imminent conversation or savor it at all?

I just can’t help thinking something’s very much lost now, and nobody is giving it much notice.

What really bothers me is what’s waiting around the corner to drag our society’s relational skills (as well as spelling) further down into the abyss. What’s it going to be like when our kids are grown and have kids of their own? Will there be brain implants for immediate, constant thought connection with those in your subscribed friends and family circle?

It’s scary to think.

Myself, I’m going to stick to smoke signals and the occasional use of the Alphorn. And stay off my lawn.

Playing Games

Michael had a tough day at school yesterday, and lost his computer privilege.

He wasn’t happy about that, needless to say.

While preparing dinner, his mom sat down with him to help him get his homework done: writing out the names of his family members, writing some random sentences, reading a book.

He was not pleased to be doing work:

“I don’t know how to write!” he complained.

“That’s why you’re doing homework,” his mom said.

“Ugh… I hate this!” he moaned.

“How many letters do I have to write?” he groaned.

“I can’t write all these letters! I don’t know how!” he whined.

“You can make an ‘S’, right? Start with that…” his mom said, gently.

He flopped back in his chair, boneless and despairing, his pencil clattering uselessly to the floor.

“Come on, Michael. Please!” his mom said.

I hate hearing him complain. It’s like red hot ice picks shoved through both eardrums. I find it far easier to give in and let him rot his brain playing on the computer than to hear his incessant complaints at doing actual literacy work.

“Michael, if you finish your homework, you can have 30 minutes of computer time back,” I said while shredding potatoes.

He reluctantly picked up his pencil and started in.

Then I added: “But, you could lose it. You have five lives now, and every time you complain, you lose a life.”

“Okay!” he said, newly energized. He whipped through his writing assignment, and then uttered a complaint.

“Oh, no! I only have four lives left because I complained!”

But he pressed on, and completed his homework with two lives to spare.

Whatever works, right? We live to battle another day.

The Song Remains The Same

A new school year. A new school.

Same boy, same issues.

I won’t bother with the in-depth recap; those who’ve muddled through this blog from the start will know that we’ve been through this before.

Three things: 1) Michael does not want to go to school. 2) Michael does not behave well when he is at school. 3) He’s begun wetting the bed again.

All summer long we’d talked up his new adventure in the fall: a real school, with classrooms and teachers and a principal and a playground and a flagpole and a lunch room and everything. He was so excited.

Until it finally came time to go.

The first day wasn’t too bad… there was some reluctance to let mommy and daddy leave, some clinging to a leg, some tears. But it was soon rectified by savvy, nearby teachers who recognized our struggle and who then swooped in to engage Michael and whisk him out to the playground.

The next day was far worse: Michael’s mommy was subjected to severe clinging and a lot of tears.

By the third day, Michael had for all practical purposes grown talons to cling on to mommy’s leg, and was flooding the school’s entry hall with tears. Not good.

Daddy stepped in and took over the morning drop-off. Little boy talons cannot sink into daddy’s leg nearly as deep, so it’s easier to pry him off.

We also started seeing the bed wetting begin. Michael hadn’t wet the bed in a year, so this must be stressful for him. We re-instituted using pull-ups at night time, and making sure he doesn’t drink anything past 6:00 PM.

We made sure he had protein for breakfast. We made sure he had plenty to drink. We made sure he had plenty of time to wake up, get dressed and get to school so that morning wasn’t a rush but a relaxing glide into the school day. And he stays perfectly relaxed and happy each morning until the van passes the flashing yellow lights of the school zone. Then the tension begins.

Some days I’ve had to just walk away and leave him there in the entrance, crying. It makes me feel three inches tall. One time I found myself calling “help!” when I didn’t see a teacher nearby, and the school counselor zipped out from the office and gently took Michael from me, explaining that I had to go to work.

Even though Michael does eventually calm down from the morning drop-off trauma, the rest of the day does not necessarily go smoothly.
I believe it was on his second day that I received a phone call from the school principal, who calmly went over a list of actions that Michael was alleged to have committed against other students: hitting, spitting, name calling.

My blood ran cold listening to that report, knowing that we absolutely do NOT condone any of those behaviors at home, and that the old patterns were playing out again.

The very next day, I got another call from the principal with a fresh new list.

This continued for several days. I was pretty sure she had my number on speed dial.

And then one day, the principal called not only to read off a list of behaviors, but to tell me that another little boy in his class is afraid to go to school because of Michael, and that this little boy’s parents are concerned.

Lord, help us.

The principal suggested that we meet with her, Michael’s teacher, the school counselor and the school psychologist.

I told my wife about this, and we both sighed deeply, wondering if somehow they were going to find a way to expel him from school. We thought the worst. I envisioned us quitting our jobs and living in a trailer somewhere, with our unschooled six-year-old bouncing off the walls, rows of bed sheets hanging outside to dry on the lines.

On the day of the meeting, my wife and I were both dreading what we would face. We were expecting an inquisitional tribunal, a star chamber that would pass judgment and pronounce sentence upon us.

Instead, they were very positive and interested in helping Michael succeed in his school. They worked with us to exchange ideas, discuss options and create a plan for both school and home that would help Michael in the best way for him. They asked our permission to work individually with him at school to see what might be causing him so much stress, why he sometimes acts with no thought for others, and how he might learn coping skills and self control.

The meeting went well, and my wife and I are encouraged now. We are hoping that with a concerted effort, we can help Michael grow out of the negative behaviors we’re used to and into mature, positive behaviors we know he’s capable of.

It will take time and work, but being encouraged is huge step forward.

On Keys and Tears

I lost my keys this morning.

I don’t mean “Whoops, I dropped them… where did they go?” kind of lost, I mean I made them vanish into non-existence. For a short time, anyway.

It was because my mind is elsewhere, either hiding or trying to solve some dilemma that really has no solution.

Upon leaving the house this morning, I nearly forgot to give my wife a kiss goodbye, which is not like me at all. Michael chattered all the way to the car as we got in and buckled him in place.

As I was getting in the driver’s seat I noticed that I didn’t have my keys with me. Whoops.

“Just sit tight, Michael. I’ll be right back.” I shut his door and ran back to the house, and knocked on the door urgently. My wife ran to the door and unlocked it.

“What’s the matter?”

“I don’t have my keys with me!” I said, frantically.

We did a quick search of my standard key landing spots but turned up nothing.

“Here, just take mine,” she said, and handed me the spare set she keeps.

“Thanks, sweetie. See you at lunch,” I said, and kissed her goodbye again.

About halfway to school, my mind delivered to me a startling bit of logic: ‘If you didn’t have your keys, how did you get in the car in the first place?’

Suddenly I remembered having them. I remember pushing the button on the fob to open the door. I remember taking them out of the cubby by the front door, and I remember holding them as my wife gave me the requisite pout for nearly forgetting that goodbye kiss.

So I had my keys. Somewhere in the car.

I did find them, eventually, tucked underneath the center console. How they got there I have no recollection.

This is the issue: where’s my mind? What’s consuming my brain cells?

I believe it is worry. Or at least, a buried anxiety concerning my little boy and his brand-new school career.

He’s been having some difficulty adjusting to going back to school, and having to leave his home and his mommy. She hasn’t been having the easiest time with it either, and I think he picks up on that to some degree…

It’s that critical point where I walk him into school and then give him a hug and say “go and play” before turning on my heel and leaving; it’s then that we both have a sense of discomfort. He looks up at me with his big blue eyes and earnest expression, searching my face for reassurance, looking to confirm that it’s right for him to be here. And I have a hard time delivering on that. There’s a big piece of me that wants to scoop him up and take him back home.

The few times his mom has brought him to school were more difficult. He’d cry, which would make her cry, which would make him cry more… luckily the teachers and the principal are right there, and being entirely used to that scenario, will cheerfully whisk him outside to play with the other kids.

It’s difficult for us. Not that we don’t think he’s ready or that he shouldn’t be going to Kindergarten. I just think we’re having trouble adjusting to the fact that he’s really there, and that he’s taking his first real steps along the path that will eventually lead to complete independence.

To help him cope with his own uncertainty, I’ve reminded him many times that mommy goes to work, daddy goes to work and his sisters go to school – so we all have places to be. And I remind him that he’s a big boy, and big boys go to school. He hasn’t entirely bought into this yet, though. He told his mom that he wants to be a little boy again and not go to school.

Am I worried about him? No. Every day it gets a little better, and he has an easier time with the farewell hug before running off to play. He even announced this morning that he wants to ride to school on the bus.

Growing up, getting bigger, leaving behind baby-hood; these will all come easier to him as the weeks pass. He’ll make friends and start getting into the groove of being an elementary school kid.

I’m not sure it’s going to be as easy a transition for his mom and me. We’ll just have to do a better job of keeping it to ourselves.

Blessing of a Broken Dishwasher

One morning not too long ago, after having loaded the dishwasher with the first of several loads of dirty dishes, I pressed the start button and nothing happened.

“What the heck?” I said, and pressed it again.

Nothing.

I made sure the door was shut. Still it wouldn’t start.

I checked to be sure nothing was blocking the door, made sure the rotors were free to move, checked the interlock switch, checked the child lock – everything was fine. It just didn’t want to start.

This was unacceptable. Not only is this dishwasher a scant six months old, but it is ENTIRELY NECESSARY in a home where dirty dishes stack to the ceiling before noon.

In a blind panic, I logged onto the Sears Blue Crew web site and started a chat session with a tech. My tech was unquestionably armed with a 1972 Sunbeam toaster manual and boasted a Kenmore product knowledge exceeded only by the guy who aerates my lawn as she asked questions like “is the door closed?” and “are the lights in the house on?” and “is it filling with water but not draining?” and “is it plugged in?” before finally declaring with authority that I’ve got the child lock engaged. The fact that I’d already informed her at the very beginning of our conversation that it was definitely not engaged was apparently lost. I was then asked to press the reset button on the GFI cord on the dishwasher, because the power is out. Through clenched teeth I calmly explained that the lights are on, therefore the power must be on as well. And I re-iterated the fact that the dishwasher was BUILT IN to the CABINET and would require DE-INSTALLATION to reach the power connection.

Upon receiving this helpful bit of information, she asked if I’d like to make an appointment for a service call. Please hurry, I said.

The next day the helpful service tech came out, and after some insightful grunts and murmurs, declared the circuit board to be dead. “I’ve never had to replace one of these before. You’re the first one,” he said. Lucky us.

He then informed us that the part is on order and that we’d be stuck doing dishes by hand for the next 11 days at least.

As I bid goodbye to the service tech and turned back to the now-crippled kitchen, in my mind appeared a vision of several large piles of saucepans, plates, saucers and cups, stacked in teetering Dr. Seuss-style arches. We would be inundated in short order.

But since in our house the watchword is “Persevere,” I rolled up my sleeves and started cleaning out the sink.

Michael asked what I was doing, so I told him I was going to do the dishes by hand. Naturally, he wanted to help.

Seeing an opportunity to provide Michael A) something to do besides chasing the cat and stepping on his sister’s hair, B) an important life skill and possibly even C) a key father-son bonding experience, I told him to go grab a chair and get some gloves on.

We started right in, scouring the sink and rinsing the dishes. Once we had our space ready, he washed and I rinsed/dried/put away. We did pretty well, he and I, plowing a sizable swath through the filthy stacks before he lost interest and decided he was done. I continued on. He asked why, and I told him very matter-of-factly that it needed to be done, even though it was a lot of work.

This cycle continued for several days: the dishes stack up, Michael expresses interest in helping, he does for a short time and then loses interest. One time he even went the distance, working with his mom to the very last dish. His expression of disappointment that they’d completed the load was priceless:

“Oh, great! I want to scrub more dishes! Who will make more dishes? Who, mama??!?

He had contributed to the family’s workload throughput, and he knew his help was appreciated.

And something else occurred: my wife and I noticed that even after a week of doing the dishes entirely by hand, several times per day, our kitchen has never been cleaner. The sinks are clean and empty, the dishes are kept under control and the counters are clear.

I pondered this observation and considered dusting off one of my pet concepts, namely that our reliance on technology to save us labor is misguided; that perhaps it is the labor saving devices that keep us enslaved.

I happened to catch something on a blog site that supported my theory, or at least lent itself to the idea.

But just yesterday I was brought back to reality as the toll of eight days without a dishwasher finally began to register. With a sink load of dishes and no counter space for cooking, Michael’s mom reached her frustration boil over point:

“Gaaah! I’m tired of doing dishes! I’m not pioneer woman! This isn’t relaxing!”

There goes my plan of shutting off the power to the house this next weekend.

So there you go. We still have a few days before the part shows up and is installed. Until then, don’t expect a lot of writing out of me; I have a stack of dishes to work through.

Literatorture

Michael isn’t much of a reader yet.

Years ago, his mom and I held out high hopes. At the age of two he knew all of his letters and their sounds, and was spelling out words he saw: EXIT, STOP, OFF, WALK, etc. We assumed he was going be reading Dostoevsky and Joyce in no time.

But despite my efforts, reading to him on a daily basis and providing him a substantial library of early reader books, Michael hasn’t willingly ventured into the realm of reading.

Quite the opposite, in fact. Trying to cajole him into reading his books is like trying to get the cat to take a bath. He drags his feet hard enough to carve grooves in the floorboards.

And he likes TV. Way too much. He is skilled – nay, he is a virtuoso – at wearing down parental will, such that an otherwise sensible and firmly resolved parent can quickly be reduced to a slathering, gnashing primate capable only of acting upon the basest instincts of survival, such as biting and clawing his or her way through the couch cushions in order to find the remote and tune in Nick Jr. or Sprout to quell the dreaded, unending whine of “mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy?”

This is a fact of which I am very much not proud.

His mom and I have decided we owe it to him to be better than this. So last night, when Michael requested TV time, his mom told him that he must first read two simple books.

This triggered his response of whining, begging, pleading and tantrum-ing as we had expected it would. But his mom stood her ground, and with each outburst she added another book to the total, which made it up to five before he gave in.

She sat down with him and opened up the first book he’d selected, which was a SpongeBob phonics book. This one highlighted the long “I” sound, and explored use of the silent “e”. And as we have done with every attempt at helping him read, we insisted that he sound out the words.

To him, this was some form of excruciating torture. I watched from the kitchen as he twisted and squirmed and nearly hyperventilated trying to compile the sounds that comprise the word “him”. He struggled. He stammered. He whined, wiggled, wobbled and tore at his clothes as his mom slowly and painfully urged him to sound out each letter and then string those sounds together into the one word.

“I don’t remember what the word is!” he protested repeatedly.

“There’s no need to remember. Just sound it out,” his mom said repeatedly.

From the kitchen I witnessed this embroilment as his mom fought valiantly to prod him into figuring out the sounds himself and as he strained to do anything to get out of doing so.

From time to time she’d say “I think maybe your daddy had better help you with this, instead of me.” This is a phrase she pulls out whenever she wants to shock Michael into proper behavior. It usually works.

I couldn’t help but think that maybe she wanted a bit of a break herself.

“Okay,” I said. “Here I come.”

“Nooooooo!” protested Michael, from the floor.

“Yup. I’m going to read with you, and mommy is going to finish making dinner.”

My wife looked up at me with pleading, defeated eyes. I smiled and held out my hand. She ascended from the couch with the grateful expression of a soul redeemed, plucked from the seventh circle of The Inferno.

“All right, sport. Sit up here,” I said.

He didn’t move. I reached down and drew his boneless body into my lap and molded him into an upright position. “Come on. Sit up straight. We’re going to get through this.”

I was determined that we would make it through without fighting. I would give him space, I would give him leeway, I would give him latitude. I would not press, I would not become impatient, I would assist him and help him see that he can do this.

I was determined.

“All right, now. Let’s look at the page. What’s Plankton doing here?”

He relaxed immediately and described what Plankton was doing.

“And what’s SpongeBob holding?”

“A magnifying glass,” he said. “And these are cans of lima beans,” he offered, brightening.

“Right! How did you know they were lima beans?”

“It says so.” He pointed out the words.

“Well that’s great. Okay, since you know this, let’s read the words. Ready? Here we go. What’s this word?”

“I don’t know…”

“Okay, what’s this letter?”

“Y”

“And what sound does it make?”

“Yuh”

“Right. What’s the next letter?”

And so it went. Letter by letter, millimeter by millimeter, we went through each letter of each word, very slowly but no less surely covering each word and then repeating each sentence to reinforce. He became more confident with each word. The sounds and the comprehension came easier to him with each page, all the way up to the last one. Slowly and surely.

In all that time I’d spent with Michael, my wife completed dinner, dessert, an amuse bouche, mastered the five mother sauces, knitted two sweaters and built a replica of the Eiffel Tower from toothpicks. Okay, so I exaggerate. It was only a model of Sutter’s Fort.

But in this time, while he grew in his ability to read, I had grown in my patience. He and I both had our victories.