Untold Tales, Part 3

When Jared was about just over a year old, I went with Kellie to Bor­ders Books and Music, which is an odd name for the store since I’ve never seen anyone pay for their over­priced CDs. It ought to be called Bor­ders Books, Lame Coffee Shop and the Col­or­ful People Who Work There.

Anyway, Kellie was hang­ing out in the Art and Archi­tec­ture sec­tion while Jared and I wan­dered through the store. At this age he was a pretty good runner, but he had a ten­dency to wobble into tables and knock things over, so I was car­ry­ing him so that he was facing me with his legs on my hip and my arms wrapped around him. We were just wan­der­ing around the store since he seemed con­tent to just stare at me and grin and I couldn’t look at any books because it took two hands to hold my giant boy.

After a while we got bored and went to check on Kellie. She was facing the wall, as was another shop­per. As we walked into the sec­tion, Jared, still grin­ning, grabbed my tra­chea with both hands and started squeez­ing as hard as he could. I gasped for air and gur­gled a bit, but couldn’t really breathe or talk. I also couldn’t make him stop because of the way I was hold­ing him. So I stood there, gur­gling, and tried to slowly inch my hands around his body so that I could get them under his armpits and pull him away from me. Jared gig­gled a little.

I was afraid that if I pulled too hard or dropped him that he’d just hang on and crush my wind­pipe. If that sounds crazy, you evi­dently missed out on Jared’s strong and wild phase when family friends were call­ing him Mowgli. Just to catch you up, at 18 months he got angry and tore his bed­room door off the hinges. So I had a reason to be scared.

I finally got my hands into posi­tion and started lift­ing and push­ing him away from me while scrunch­ing up my neck and shak­ing my head to get him to let go. At that moment, 3 things happened:

  1. Jared let go,
  2. I man­aged to extend my arms so that I was hold­ing him out away from my body, gasp­ing in air, blink­ing my eyes and shak­ing just a bit, and
  3. Kellie and the other shop­per turned around.

Need­less to say, they thought I was some mur­der­ous loon about to kill a little boy. And truth be told, they weren’t that far off from the truth. I mean, it cer­tainly looked that way. Pic­ture a man hold­ing a baby at arms length with his face all red and purple blotches, eyes bug­ging out of his head and gasp­ing for air. Not my finest hour.

So Kellie ran over and grabbed Jared away, and I sort of made some strange noises that fell short of intel­li­gent speech. Mostly I just pointed at my throat. Shop­ping guy took off.

And I always held Jared so that he was facing away from me for the next 3 years.

Bonus Untold Tale:

Jared used do this cool trick at that age: he’d be sit­ting in a shop­ping cart smil­ing at you. You’d smile back and then he’d lower his head and bite you on the knuckle. When you low­ered your head to try to pry him off, he’d lean back and slam your head against the handle of the cart.

It only took about a dozen bangs to the head for me to get wise to that one.

September 3rd, 2007 · Category: Family, Personal · Tags: , , , , · Comments Off