How to Fix a Broken Bed

Beloved son,

Recently you came to my bedside in the middle of the night and woke me up in a hushed voice: “Daddy, my bed fell apart.”

I can’t say I was totally surprised. We bought your bed used for twenty bucks—a style-over-substance purchase driven more by the fact that it was Elmo-themed than by any thought for its structural integrity. When we got it home that first day, we discovered that a couple bolts had been replaced with ill-fitting ones. The foot of the bed didn’t attach quite right, the legs wobbled, and the frame squeaked loudly under the lightest pressure. The Elmo decal was peeling in one corner.

You were riding off to sleep each night in a jalopy; it was bound to break down at some point.

When you told me it had broken, I pictured a heap of metal and blankets. What I found, however, was that your bed was just fine. The headboard had jiggled loose and was leaning back slightly, but the bed was perfectly intact. The frame must have shifted just enough to wake you up, just enough to give you the feeling that things were falling apart.

I straightened out the headboard, assured you it was good to go, and tucked you in. I think you were asleep before I’d closed the door behind me.

We eventually replaced that old junker with a sturdier bed, but I kept chewing on your sentence to me, that beautiful statement of need: “Daddy, my bed fell apart.” When things fall apart—or when we think they do—where else ought we to turn?

Around the time of the bed incident, that same sense of things falling apart was swirling in my own heart. Your nanny had just quit—your fifth in just over a year. It seemed that no matter who Mom and I hired, no one could manage to stay for more than three months, long enough to make a connection, learn the routines, start to become part of our home and family…and then leave.

On the surface, anyway, losing a nanny always affected me and Mom more than you and sister. Sometimes it gutted us. During that two-week notice period, we’d be working in the office and overhear your fits of giggles downstairs, or we’d look out the window and see you and your nanny drawing chalk on the patio, and we’d nearly cry, the sense of impending loss was so strong.

You and sister don’t yet have words like “grief” and “loss.” Each time a nanny left, you wouldn’t even use the words you have, like “sad” or “mad.” But surely it affected you. Like any of your experiences at this young age, it is hard to say exactly what sort of growth is taking place in your internal landscape, but there is no doubt something taking shape. What impressions will remain from these kind, loving people who, even if just for a few months, were so steady a presence in your life?

Perhaps it will be a skill whose origin you can’t place—a love for baking, an idiom, a melody seemingly innate. The other day you were making up words to the tune of “Amazing Grace.” I don’t recall me or Mom singing that to you.

Perhaps it will be a memory, like walking to MacDonald’s for lunch, or making playdough from scratch with M, or that time when K dropped the cookies in the oven and lit the parchment paper on fire.

Perhaps it will be a token, like the giant bag of markers R gave you, or the first watercolor painting you ever did with J, or the water guns C surprised you with one day.

Or perhaps it will be simply that most enduring of impressions, that deep, untouchable sense of being cared for. I still remember, over twenty-five years later, a family friend called Uncle Nick whom I absolutely adored as a little boy. I could hardly tell you a thing he gave me or a word he said. What I remember is his gray mustache, and his gentleness, and sitting in his lap and feeling at home, smiled upon, safe. Our souls are soft for the imprint of love.

While you had a special relationship with each of your nannies, a thought flashed across my mind every time one of them quit: I should just take care of the kids myself. At first, this thought came from a place of frustration, vexed at having to start yet another search for yet another nanny. I would dismiss the possibility of me taking over as a reverie, countering with rational, responsible, Grown-Up Person ideas, like “But I have a good job” or “What about our health insurance?” or “I’m just being reactive.”

Over time, though, that flash of a thought began to linger. But really, what if? I sat with it, let it simmer as I lay in bed at night, asked God for direction.

I began to develop counters to the counters. When I considered my good job, I began to ask, “What better job is there than spending time with my own children?” When I considered health insurance, I began to ask, “Well how much are we spending now on childcare?” When I considered that maybe I was just reacting to the moment, I began to answer, “Or maybe I’m being responsive, attentive to a new opportunity.”

I am not a spontaneous man. I ran the numbers on lost income versus savings on childcare (it was nearly a wash); I got health insurance estimates (we could manage it); I had long conversations with Mom, Grandpa, Mimi, and your aunt to make sure I hadn’t drifted into insanity (I hadn’t). All signals were green.

Ultimately, my decision to quit my job of six years and indefinitely pause—or at least reroute—my professional career did not come down to a spreadsheet comparison or a choice word from a loved one. It came down to something deep within me, a longing, even a calling, to be with you and sister in your early years as much as I possibly could.

So, why did I quit my job? Simplest answer: I wanted to. I could feel in my heart and my bones that I was ready to start a new role; it just took five nannies’ quitting for me to realize it.

All that fretting about how to solve our childcare problem, and the answer was right there within our means. When I’d rushed to Daddy to tell him about my broken bed, he gave it a little adjustment and said, “See? You’re all good.”

Soon after notifying my workplace, I came across a psalm that had meant a lot to me years ago, when Mom and I were first married and making very little money. Psalm 127 has this lovely, counter-cultural line, “Unless the Lord builds the house, the builders labor in vain” (v. 1). At the time, when the temptation was strong to build our future through sheer willpower and selfish ambition, that verse was a critical reminder about the power of faith, the futility of our strivings, and our true helplessness to do or live apart from God.

In the context of quitting my job and stepping out into something very new, that line resonated again. But as I read on in the psalm, I was floored: four verses later was another line of great personal significance. Years before you were born, I had asked Grandpa why he had decided to have kids, and he cited Psalm 127:4-5: “Like arrows in the hands of a warrior are children born in one’s youth. Blessed is the man whose quiver is full of them.”

This unusual metaphor stuck with me and Mom for years, often surfacing when we talked about having kids or how many to have. And here was this verse again, side by side with the one about builders laboring in vain unless the Lord builds with them. Of all the post-decision confirmations I received—and there were many, from increased side income to unexpectedly low insurance rates to sad yet regret-free goodbyes with colleagues—rediscovering Psalm 127 was the loudest assurance of all, almost as if God were saying, “Yup, I told you it would work out.”

A few months into full-time dad duty, I have certainly had my share of tough moments with you and sister, yet I have never once thought that I made the wrong decision. In this season of life, I feel called to be with you, and I can only thank our good Father for providing our family the means to do it.

He built the house; he loaded the quiver. He can certainly handle a busted bed.

My last day of work, after you, sister, and Mom surprised me. As I was packing up my office, you walked in wearing your little poncho and carrying a bouquet of flowers. That image was another confirmation that I had made the right decision.

Stealing the NOC List

Beloved children,

When Mom and I were first married, we had a washing machine but no dryer. Whenever we did laundry, clothes would end up hanging on every available surface of the house. We would unfold the ironing board and lay out all our underwear. There would be rocks and paperweights pinning tee shirts to the windowsills. There would be sweaters draped over the kitchen chairs, socks on the shower rod, bras on the doorknobs. We looked like the victims of a laundry bombing.

Mom commented once how funny our situation was, and my response was ridiculously serious: “What’s so funny about it? There are millions of people in the world without dryers.” True enough, I suppose. At the time, it seemed perfectly normal: Without a drying machine, what else was one to do?[1]

But of course, I was missing the point. It was funny. The air smelled of detergent. If guests came over, either they’d see all our laundry on display, or we’d stash away a damp pile in our bedroom. Practical, yes, but funny, too.

Raising the two of you brings about so many practical yet funny ways of life—a very strange “normal” that is perfectly pragmatic in the moment but, with a little distance, downright hilarious.

This phenomenon shines brightest at nighttime. In your first months of sharing a room, your sensitivity to noise turned every square inch of our house into that high-security computer vault from Mission Impossible where the NOC list is stored. For agents Mom and Dad, any inadvertent scrape of the wall had the potential to trip the alarm. My nighttime maneuvers around the house, especially upstairs near your bedroom, became no less intricate than the wire-suspended acrobatics of Ethan Hunt.

The first security measure to bypass was the baby gate. Mom and I had to close it at night when we went to bed, but it made such a loud, metallic click that it could easily compromise the mission. So for months, I would sneak up the stairs, stalk into the bathroom, retrieve a bath towel, and smother the locking mechanism to muffle the click.

If I forgot something downstairs, opening that gate again was out of the question: It was the daddy long-legs step-over for me, one hand on the railing, one hand pressed against the wall, praying that I wouldn’t tumble down the pitch-black stairs.

The next security measure was the landing, a 10-foot patch of carpet connecting your bedroom, the office, our bedroom, and the bathroom. If we got lucky and sister slept through most the night, we had to account for the possibility of brother waking up, seeking out me and Mom, and in the process slamming both bedroom doors and thus rousing sister, too.

To mitigate this risk, our first tactic was to lay a small towel between each door and its frame, to cushion the sound of the closing door. My dear boy, you quickly foiled this plan: Noticing that the door wouldn’t close, you would look down, remove the obstruction, and slam the door anyway. Mission failed. Headquarters had been infiltrated, and the baby sirens went a-wailing.

So we got clever. Instead of placing the towels on the ground, we laid them on top of the door so that you could neither slam the door nor remove the towel.

But then, when should we insert the towel into the door? Should we rig it at bedtime, and allow additional light and sound into your bedroom in the hours before Mom and I went to bed? Or should we leave your door closed at bedtime, then return later to install our dampening mechanism?

We opted for the latter, which meant more ease of mind in the evening but a dangerous mission each night. After getting ready for bed, I would creep toward your door, fold the towel to the correct thickness, and then listen for the right moment. For full sound camouflage, I’d wait for the heater to kick on, and I’d let one lullaby on your sound machine finish and the next one begin.

I’d wrap my hand around the doorknob and start to turn. Never have I been so conscious of the internal workings of a door latch. Each click pinged yellow on my mental decibel meter.

I know what you must be thinking: Dad, you’re a complete psycho. You’re not wrong. In that season of fragile sleep, I went to virtually any length to ensure as much rest as possible. There was a while when, if I had to use the bathroom at night, I would pee in the dark, using nothing but window-filtered moonlight to find my porcelain target. Why? I don’t even know. What difference would the bathroom light make to my children sleeping down the hall? But I was in ninja mode, and ninjas do everything in the dark.

I should note, by the way, that Mom does not and never did share any of these neuroticisms. Much like she shakes her head at my habit of locking the car twelve times “just to be sure,” Mom has given me my due share of teasing over my nighttime antics. When she gets ready for bed, she doesn’t tiptoe up the stairs. She doesn’t close doors like she is cracking a safe. She doesn’t turn on light switches as if she were cutting the red—no, the yellow!—wire.

Even though you sleep mere steps away behind the thin veil of your bedroom door, somehow she manages to act like, well, a normal person. It makes me very nervous.

And by the way, I may be neurotic, but I’m not stupid. Deep down, I know that playing Ethan Hunt makes a negligible difference, if any. I mean, the sound of me opening my dresser drawer two rooms away from yours is not enough to wake you up. If it is, then you were about to wake up, anyway.

Still, I’m hardly the only person in the house acting weird at night.

Like how about that night, my cheeky son, when sister had a dickens of a time getting settled, and as she finally relaxed and I was laying her down, you decided to blurt at top volume, “I AM A ROBOT!” I laugh now, but I didn’t then.

Or how about that early morning when I woke up to find your bedroom door ajar and your bed empty, and when I looked around the house, I found you in the office, drawing pictures on Mom’s computer in Microsoft Paint (a mystery in itself, as we had never shown you how to open or use that program).

Or my darling daughter, how about your strategy, worthy of a PETA flier, where you protest your confinement by scooting to one side of your mattress and dangling your legs between the slats of your crib (as in the photo up above).

Or how about that charming habit that I imagine all children are taught at Parental Tormenting Camp where you come down with a nasty case of insomnia the one night in the whole month when Mom and I have something scheduled after bedtime.

Or how about that routine the two of you coordinated for a while where you slept in shifts, always diligently waking up just as the other got settled back to bed. Some nights I felt like I was trapped inside one of those river-crossing logic puzzles, where the farmer has to get the fox and the goose and a bag of grain to the other side but can only fit one thing on the boat at a time. I don’t like that type of puzzle on paper, and I like it even less when I’m the farmer and I spend more time on the boat shuttling children than I do on shore.

So yes, I may have developed a neurotic habit or two, but can you blame me? If necessity is the mother of invention, desperation is its father.

Do you know what’s even crazier than all these habits and quirks, though? The fact that I am going to miss this stage of life. Sure, I am ready for more regular sleep, and I am happy that you’re both doing a lot better at night now than you were even a month ago. But when again in my life will I get to wake up in the early morning light and see through the crack in my door a sleepy-eyed boy stumbling toward his mom and dad? When will I get to rise with the birds and the sun to take my wide-awake daughter for a run? When again will I get to soothe my little girl back to sleep when she is screaming, screaming, screaming, until the gentle melody in my voice pokes through her armor of fuss and she finally quiets and nestles close? When again will I get to lay next to my boy, holding his hand in silence until he fades to angelic sleep?

Recently there was a night, my son, when you were having an unusually tough time getting to bed. Mom and I had tried every tactic, and you had stalled every way you knew how—books downstairs, books upstairs, water from the bathroom sink, water from the kitchen sink, change your PJs, change them back. We were getting nowhere.

With my last shred of patience, I conceded to just one more of your demands, on condition that you go straight to bed afterward. (On those tough bedtimes, our otherwise sweet routine of stories and cuddles degenerates into a business-like transaction of contracts, clauses, and compromises. Not my favorite.)

I carried you to bed for the umpteenth time and pulled the blanket up to your chest. As I started to stand, your little hand grabbed hold of mine, and you whispered a sentence so true it pierced me, traveling down to that vein of fatherly love deep in my heart: “I want you to be with me.”

I want you to be with me. It doesn’t get more precious than that. How disarming and poetic. In that fiddly, fussy, frustrating moment, it’s like you illustrated to me in seven words what Augustine meant with the great quote: “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it finds rest in you.”

My desire for control, for predictability, for good sleep, for me time—sometimes these overshadow the immense privilege it is to be your daddy, to be the one who responds at any hour, the one called either by child’s tantrum or child’s whisper, “Be with me.”

And yes, a privilege, too, to be the one who resorts to stealing the NOC list to keep the house sleeping.

Thinking back on those early days of our marriage without a dryer, I don’t just view them with a laugh. I view them with a smile. One of my favorite photos from that season of life shows the ironing board covered in boxers and tee shirts. The pragmatic becomes funny, and the funny becomes dear.

There may be millions of parents out there—yes, even this very night—trying desperately to get their kids to sleep and keep them there. A year down the line, and those same parents will be looking back and laughing. Ten years later they’ll be saying, “Those were the days, weren’t they?” This parent will be, anyway.



[1] Okay, it’s called clothes lines and laundromats.

Late Talker

A poem for you, my beloved daughter, yet to form your first word:


Late Talker

We don’t communicate in words
we communicate in looks and touch
in a cry heard through the walls
in the sudden opening of a door

we communicate in lines
yellow or blue in the soft rip
of a Velcro diaper wing in
front to back in back is best

we communicate in spoonfuls
in grunts in a washcloth between
your toes in the buzz of your tongue
in patter of knee and palm

we communicate in tiger growls
and monkey shrieks in a tilt
of your hips on the perch
of my arm in a flail of hands in flint

of laughter a clutch of hair
in a press of noses in fingers
wrapped around a finger
in a long unbroken gaze

we communicate in voice in tone
a deep hum from my heart
to your head in a thumb
hooked on my lip

in dim lights at night in the turning
of a page in the heaviness 
of your head and my hand
the slowness of our breath

we communicate in root
and branch in the seed
planted grown tall then planted
in what precedes what follows

in what one day will be
words and what words
when they cease 
become again