Yesterday, Natalie walked around the house with my earphones, looking like a miniature iPod commercial, and I had to slam my head in the door to remember that she’s only two. I forget pretty often, to tell you the truth. What has possessed my child to run in shrieking, geometrically challenged circles for the last hour? How is the word “potty” still an emotional stumbling block in this house? And why won’t she just drive herself to the park for once? I watch her sweeping the kitchen or reading stories to her sister, casually brushing hair out of her face, observing her world with deeply intelligent eyes and a running commentary full of words like “actually” and “patella,” and I can hardly believe she’s not yet twenty-five.
But then she eats my birth control the second my back is turned, and she liberally applies baby powder to every square inch of her room, and she loudly sings, “I have in my pocket!” until I ask her what and subsequently turn back time to take “Daddy’s shave” away from her before any fingers are severed. She cries about the injustice of breakfast. Lollipops cause her to spasm with joy. She marches around the living room chanting, “Eighteen, nineteen, tenteen, eleventeen, twelveteen, three!” In those moments, I re-remember that she’s two…
…and why that rocks my socks off.