Sunday, May 12, 2013

Mom'll Find It.


After a particularly long bedtime routine a few years back, I gingerly placed my calm and sleepy two-year-old in his crib only to realize that his "Boo," which was (and still is) his can't-sleep-without-it stuffed animal, was not in the crib.  After laying Owen down, I raced downstairs, ran straight to the tricycle parked in the corner of the living room, opened up its covered trunk compartment, pulled out Boo, and raced right back upstairs, all the while praying that the hard-fought bedtime routine wouldn't be catastrophically affected.  When I finally returned to the living room, my husband looked at me in awe and asked how in the hell I knew exactly where Boo was hidden.  And my reply was, "I always know where Boo is hidden."  And I still have my eye on that silly blue elephant.  Boo was Owen's first best friend and his comfort during the transition into long nights alone in his room.  Now, after three books and two stories, Boo still makes it possible for me to close Owen's bedroom door and claim an hour or two for myself every evening.  Boo is important to the health and well-being of our whole little family. 
Boo and the tattered remains
 of Strawberry Blanket
Moral of the story:  One of those "maternal instincts" that kick in once you become a mom includes instinctively knowing how to protect what's most important to your child.  I'm sure my mom kept tabs on my Strawberry Blanket, just like I keep tabs on Owen's Boo, because she understood the importance of instilling in me an understanding that, even at bedtime when I was alone in my dark bedroom, I wasn't ever really alone.  I know Owen's Boo won't always be able to provide the sort of comfort he craves in times of darkness, and as he grows I'm not sure what will replace Boo.  But I am sure that I'll do my best to figure it out.  And if I can't...Well, then I'll ask my mom.