I was writing something yesterday; something about wristwatches and freedom from digital tyranny. I’m at an impasse with that post. It’s not quite cooked yet. I’ll probably finish it but I have to clarify my ideas first. I can’t just write about my watch.
Wait, maybe I can.
*****
Instead, I’ll write about spring. It’s late March in Maryland, and it’s truly spring. We’ve cycled through all four seasons at least three times in the last few weeks, but spring is about more than the weather. Our forsythia are in full bloom right now, and our daffodil bulbs came up, and our cherry trees are just a day or so away from peak bloom. We have just a few days of overlap between forsythia and cherry trees in bloom. I’m predicting that it’ll happen on Friday. I’ll report back.
Spring is also the season of longer days and evening daylight. I stayed outside walking until after 7 last night and it was still daylight when I arrived home. In the winter, I always feel like shutting myself in at 5 PM. It’s nice to have more outside time.
*****
I was about a block and a half from home at 6 PM, just wrapping up my walk, when I noticed a small group of people clustered together on the sidewalk, surrounding a little boy who appeared to be about 9. The boy had taken a turn on a friend’s much-too-large scooter, but lost control and wiped out on the asphalt. Thankfully, he was with friends and able to get out of the road and onto the sidewalk.
The boy’s friends and two passersby were all trying to convince him to stand up and start walking home, but he remained on the sidewalk. The other kids told me what had happened, and a man and his young daughter were encouraging the boy (I will call him Jose) to get in the car and ride home with them. I offered to walk him home or to ride in the car with him. He just kept shaking his head. His hand and arm were bleeding, and he also had blood on his shirt that turned out to be from a scrape on the scooter’s sharp edge.
Eventually, Jose (who turned out to be 11 and a 6th grader at the middle school that my sons attended) stood up and started to walk toward the neighborhood park where he’d left his backpack and jacket. The other boys and I walked with him. Jose’s hand had started to swell and I kept encouraging him to go home and take care of his injuries, and he kept refusing.
At this point I wondered if he was in an abusive situation and afraid to go home. When we reached the park, Jose sat down at a picnic table, and said no once again when I asked him if he was ready to go home. I was very worried at this point, and I didn’t really know what to do other than to stay with him. A man who was with his two very young children approached us and asked if we were OK. I explained the situation briefly, and the man yelled to his wife to keep an eye on the kids while he ran to his car for a bottle of water.
Jose seemed grateful for the water. We encouraged him to wash his hand off first, and then he drank the rest of the bottle. The man and I tried again to get Jose to go home, and he said that he’d go “soon” but that he needed to “chill a little” first. We were at our wits’ end.
Then moments later, two older kids showed up, a boy of about 15 and a girl about 13, who turned out to be Jose’s cousin and his sister. They were out looking for Jose because he was late getting home, and his mother was worried. The cousin yelled to someone I couldn’t see, “I found him. I’ll text her now!”
Jose sat upright. “Dude! Do not text my mom!”
“What are you talking about? She’s freaking out. You can’t just leave her out here thinking you got killed or something.” He started to compose a message. “Wait!” Jose yelled.
Jose’s sister chimed in. “What is your problem?”
Long story short (too late, I am well aware): Jose’s mother had forbidden him to ride on his friend’s electric scooter, knowing that exactly what happened would happen. Jose did not want to deal with the ensuing fuss, and he was also afraid that his mother wouldn’t let him hang around outside after school anymore.
Jose’s cousin told him that he could go home with them, or that he’d text his aunt, “and then she’s gonna come running over here with bandaids and shit.” His cousin, obviously a very smart boy, knew that the embarrassment of having your mother fuss over you in front of a bunch of other kids was far worse than the inevitable maternal freak-out when you walk in the house bruised and bleeding. Jose sighed. “Fine,” he said. “Calm down. I’m coming.”
The three kids (cousin, sister, brother) were all obviously well cared for, and the conversation among them assured me that they were also loved. They walked away together laughing and joking, the older boy carrying his injured cousin’s backpack. At this point, the man and his wife were dealing with the drama of getting young children to leave the park on a beautiful day. We all looked at each other and smiled and nodded. Just as the three kids reached the sidewalk at the edge of the park, they turned back, waved, and yelled “Thank you!”
*****
That all happened on Tuesday. It’s Sunday now, and March is almost over. The cherry blossoms and the forsythia and the daffodils are in peak bloom now. It’s fully spring.