Friday, August 25, 2017

First day of school

Well, we have a school-aged kid. As Austin has been saying for a while, "I'm not a baby, I'm a big boy!"

On Thursday morning, We got ready, packing up his new dinosaur backpack with a few snacks and toys, a change of clothes, and I hid a couple of pacifiers at the bottom, just in case.

We had a photo session in front of the house, where Austin proudly displayed his sign for the new year.

We trouped over in our 4.5 minute walk across the street and jumped into the fray. Billions of children and parents scurrying about. The new principal was there in the thick of it, directing traffic like an old hand even though he isn't, with just 3 weeks on the job. We spotted Austin's two teachers, Mrs. Mukendi and Mrs. Keeno, who visited our house the day before. We joined the procession into Austin's classroom, where we dropped off his backpack in his cubbie, which was the first one. We know Austin Aaronson will likely always be first on the list, which is fun.

Breakfast was laid out for the kids, a cheese omelette, milk and orange juice. Austin took a seat at a table set out for 4. Isla, a neighbor kid, took a seat next to him. We were happy to see a familiar family. Kids were in various stages of sitting at the tables. Some, like Austin and Isla, tucked in, others were exploring the new toys and others, like Calder (the new Kyle?) were up and down and back and forth and all over the place. Austin asked to go to the bathroom and was delighted to discover a kid-sized toilet. "Mommy, my feet touch the ground!" Seeing it from his perspective suddenly brought into relief the inconvenience of an uncomfortable throne.

We'd have made it out of the classroom ok, but then came the domino effect. One little kid started crying...and at first I thought, "ok, our kid's got this! No crying!" Then another kid started. We sat Austin on the rug on the rooster circle. "Look Austin, a rooster. Your pop pop loves roosters." He seemed to buy it. We hugged and walked away. He looked skeptical. My voice failed me as my throat closed up. I walked away, waving and praying the tears welling up would not betray me. A few more steps toward the door and a few more waves. Austin went from skeptical to concerned as a few more dominos fell. The teachers were running out of lap space. A little girl was about to head out the door looking for her mommy and as I stopped to block her, Austin came running. He jumped up and clung to me. The dam of tears held for both of us. He was absolutely stoic. 

His teacher took him from me. I choked out, "Mommy will be back" and ran out the door, where Hayden waited with red rimmed eyes.

I watched the phone all day and rightly assumed that Austin survived. 

At 3:15, anxious parents paced back and forth at the playground where pick up was as classrooms emptied out of the building. His was the last class out. He spotted me immediately and jumped up into my arms. He didn't cry, but it took him a few minutes to say anything other than one word answers to our pepper of questions.

His teacher said he did great and as the evening unraveled we got details directly from him that confirmed that. "We brushed our teeth and I got a red toothbrush." (his favorite color!) "I was on the jungle gym." "Isla is my friend."

He didn't nap, and passed out with his "baby" in his mouth around 5pm. We figured we could all let the rules slid for the sake of comfort and familiarity on this big day.

When he woke up and went to the bathroom, he said, "mommy, I like the toilet at my school better. And, I thought, "well, that's something!"




1 comment:

  1. So glad you made the time to capture this milestone day in your wonderful words. Thanks!

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