My Diary of Triplet Fatherhood

Triple Trouble

Archive for May 15th, 2007

Stop, Grow

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As I sit on the end of the sofa, I experience one of those rare moments where time seems to slow to a standstill. As is usual at bedtime, all three girls sit on J’s legs, teddy bears balanced on their own laps as they drink cups of “mi” (that’s “milk”) and wait for a go at turning the page of the book.

Tonight, Evie has had the idea of demanding Bearbear be allowed to have a turn. For a short while this means she, as the power behind Bearbear, is getting twice the number of turns her sisters do but, of course, it doesn’t take long for Coco (Scarlett’s bear) to want to a turn and, loathe to miss out, Jem soon chimes in with a demand of her own witha cry of “Raf!”. To those uninitiated into my girls’ fondness for single syllables, this means something like “Excuse me, Mother, but may my stuffed giraffe be allowed to partake in turning the pages of this evening’s excellent tale?”

J holds out the book to Raf but Jemima just looks concerned. Unlike Bearbear and Coco, he has no hands. She holds Raf up to the light and peers carefully at his shoulders as if closer inspection might reveal previously unnoticed appendages hiding there. But then, with a look of inspiration filling her face, she turns him round, lifts his tail and uses it to flick over the page.

“Who knows what this is?” J asked, pointing to the picture of a football on the newly-revealed page.

“Ba’. Free!” Evie shouts, excited. (That’s “three balls”)

“No, there’s only one ball.” J points again. “One.”

“Free!” Evie demands, wriggling off J’s lap and running towards the other room.

“Oh, I see. Yes, there are three balls in the other room. But stay here… it’s story time.”

“Free!” Scarlett replies, twisting to get down.

“Ba’!” Jem agress, following her sisters. And they’re gone.

J and I exchange exasperated smirks.

And then they’re back, clambering up onto J again, holding one ball each as well as their bears and milk.

“Raf?”

I can’t say why this moment struck me so.

Perhaps it’s something to do with the fact that I could see so clearly the thought processes my daughters were undergoing… those early months came back to me, months when I would wonder so much what was going on behind those distant gazes, if they remembered me day to day, what they were seeing when they looked around at a world raw and enormous before their senses. Now, we hardly ever don’t understand them, or, at least, in the case with the three balls, we soon get corrected on our misunderstandings. They communicate their experiences all the time and, once you get to understand their monosyllabic take on language, it’s possible to have drawn-out discussions.

Or maybe it’s how self-possessed they are. No more lying around and waiting for the world to come to them.

Or just how funny and unpredictable they are. They make me laugh every day with their impulsiveness.

All of which is to say, I suppose, that I realised suddenly, how much my daughters are growing up, and how very fast time is passing. It’s only when a moment in jumps out at me that I realise how much things are changing all the time and how there’s just not time to both live each moment and reflect on how wonderful it was. That moment when they’d all run off to find balls gave me just a few seconds to assimilate everything that had happened, to smile and share my happiness with J. Too many things passed unremarked.

Written by Fergus

May 15th, 2007 at 5:10 pm

Posted in Uncategorized