Friday, May 08, 2009

Joy and Pain

One thing I learned about being a Dad is that each day is filled with new opportunities as well as challenges.

The Joy....
Today JP had school orientation. New school for him and for our family. He told me he loved it "ONE THOUSAND PERCENT".

This past weekend, David celebrated his first Holy Communion. During the ceremony, he read the Prayer of the Faithful in front of the entire congregation...FLAWLESSLY. There were awkward social moments (sign of peace), but overall a successful event for all of us.

The Pain...
Yesterday was David's Poetry Tea at school. Each student took turns reading 2 short poems at the podium. For David...he approached the podium awkwardly. He held the podium and looked like he was going to start reading. Then he looked up at the audience (mistake) and just froze. He muttered, "this is embarassing" and completely froze. The other kids said "come on David, you can do it!" After 2 minutes, his eyes began to water. This moment was (and continues to be) extremely painful for me. I am deeply saddened by it. What hurts me the most is that in THAT MOMENT, I had NO IDEA how to help him. I can not forget the look on his face of despair, fear and anxiety. I did NOTHING. The teacher tried to comfort him while Rachel read his poems to the class to complete the poetry tea party. Everyone clapped! Folks went to eat cheese and crackers while in the corner David and my wife were crying. Within minutes, David is having crackers and fruit and interacting (in his way) with the other kids.

After school, David came home and asked "Hey Dad, want to play basketball?" We shot hoops together, we laughed and he made a basket.

It seems to be a small blip on his radar. Yet I am still sad.

I do know that I have not posted in some time. Maybe I was being complacent with his progress? This was a wake up call for me to push forward - for me and for him.

4 comments:

Charlene said...

It's so true that parenthood (and life!) can be one big roller coaster ride. Thinking about each moment in terms of "This too shall pass" is the best way I know to truly appreciate and maximize both the challenges and the opportunities. Sounds like you're a GREAT dad!

Suz Bednarz said...

Wow. Made me cry, Irish Jack. Hugs to you and your family.

Fatherhood said...

Heya,

Glad to hear another stable co-fathering role model is alive and well!

Kind Regards,
Noel

http://noeldixon.blogspot.com/2009/05/on-fatherhood-in-year-2009.html
http://noeldixon.blogspot.com/2009/05/how-family-lives.html

Anonymous said...

John, just keep doing what you're doing. I've been in similar situations with my 8 year old. It hurts when you see them hurting and you feel helpless. I just know you're a great dad! Bless you and your family.