Most days, I am the first one awake in our household. This
has been the case nearly since the children were born, when I began to cherish
each peaceful moment I could sneak into the increasingly chaotic and
unpredictable life of being Mom. The first hour after my alarm goes off – when
it is just me, a cup of coffee, and my work – is often my most productive and
focused time of the day.
On weekends, though, I often stay in bed until the children
find me. (This is generally somewhere between the crack of dawn and when most
people without kids arise. But probably closer to the crack of dawn.) Despite
repeated past experience, I continue to think that I will enjoy a quiet cup of
coffee and some reading with three children milling about in close proximity.
Normally I am half reading while also answering endless questions about
seemingly unrelated and irrelevant things.
Last Saturday morning, though, there was a breakthrough. It
was so astounding, so peacefully unprompted, that I tried not to dwell on it,
lest it all dissolved into noise and madness, which is normally what happens
when I take note of these harmonious moments. Two of my children reclined on
opposite ends of the same couch, quietly reading books they’d brought home from
school. The littlest one sat at the table in the big window, contentedly drawing
with her well-used crayons.
I sipped my coffee and read a magazine undisturbed. Surely
this is a fluke, I thought. Then came Sunday morning’s story hour, and a repeat
performance Monday (the first day of school vacation), then Tuesday, then
Wednesday. And I dared to dream this is the new morning normal.
Just because the children begin the day reading together
does not, of course, mean our house is a peaceful oasis of constant accord. These
days that start with sibling story time still include arguments about toys and
drama surrounding who will sit where and complaints about how unfair the rules
are. But there’s a different tone to a day that starts off with quiet
togetherness, and this emerging routine has been a happy surprise.
There have been shelves full of books in our house since
before there were children here, and we are constantly adding to the kids’ book
collection and weeding out no-longer-needed stories to make room for newer
models. Board books have given way to picture books with more words, and these
are gradually evolving to books with chapters and very few images. We have
always read together, but increasingly the children are reading on their own,
to themselves and each other.
They read tales about fairies and goblins, time travel to
mystical lands, the adventures of orphaned children and dragons and rescued
dogs. They pore over nonfiction books, soaking up new information and relishing
true stories of animal heroes and people who lived in other times and places.
Many nights, well after I’ve tucked the children in, I’ve
had to remind them to turn off the reading lights and go to sleep. Even the
littlest one, who is still learning to sound out words and would rather be read
to than read alone, looks through a book each night after she is kissed
goodnight.
One night, a few months ago, my husband and I heard the muffled
voices of the older children well past bedtime, broken every few minutes by the
thump of something hitting their bedroom floor. Turns out they were taking
turns reading to each other. One would finish a chapter and chuck the book
across the room to the other, who would repeat the process.
Sometimes now when I ask for help completing a chore the
response is a distracted, “Just a minute, Mom. I’m really into my book.” I’m
not sure if this is a book-loving mother’s dream-come-true or the cunning of
her children, who know reading is one of the few excuses that will buy a bit of
time before doing chores or an extra few minutes with the light on after
bedtime.
I know how it is to be sucked into a book, into a different
time and place with characters who are both foreign and familiar, into a story
so good it’s all-encompassing. I have been known to read while I am cooking
dinner or brushing my teeth, and definitely well past my own bedtime. If I have
an important project or big assignment due, I will often wait to start a new
book for fear that I will become so engrossed in the story I’ll be too
distracted to concentrate on work.
I understand that it is hard, sometimes, to put down the
story and return to the world beyond the book cover. So I will often allow the
children time to finish the page or the chapter, to languish in the story of
the day a few minutes more before chores or dinner or bed. And this new morning
ritual of sibling story time is fine by me, however long it lasts. Breakfast
can wait.
Original content by Meghan McCarthy McPhaul, posted to her Blog: Writings From a Full Life. This essay also appears as Meghan's Close to Home column in the April 24, 2015 edition of the Littleton Record.
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