Life Without the Monkey

Beloved children,

Earlier this year I was unpacking your bag after you’d taken a weekend excursion to Grandma and Grandpa’s, when a single thought raced through my mind:

Oh no. They forgot the monkey.

In the rush of gathering all your things—no small feat, given your capacity for sprawl—they had remembered everything except that white plastic monkey, your trusty lullaby machine of almost five years.

I took a breath. In an emergency, I tend to become resourceful, not panicky. Grandma and Grandpa would be visiting in three days. We could make it three days sans singe.

You must be wondering what the big deal is. It’s just a monkey, right?

Wrong.

Let’s contextualize this. When Mom was first pregnant, we received a gift from your aunt’s sister that was somewhat out of the blue. We hadn’t expected a present from her, and we didn’t have any sort of sound machine on our baby registry. When we unwrapped this lullaby device, Mom and I both thought, “Huh. A monkey.” There was no way we could have conceived then how integral to our lives that plastic primate would become, how deep in our consciousness its melodies would carve themselves.

Since the day you were born almost five years ago, my son, we have used that monkey for virtually every nap and every bedtime. It is, literally, a lifelong companion. The device has a timer option where it stops playing music after 20 minutes, but we read early on about the importance of keeping the sleep environment consistent all night long. So, from day one, we’ve let it crank out tunes sun-down to sun-up.

I hadn’t done the math on this until recently, and when I did, I could hardly believe the numbers. Even if our calculations exclude naps (which would add a whole bunch of lullabies), you’ve listened to that machine for over 1,700 consecutive nights. Each song is about 2 minutes long, and you’re in bed on average 11 hours a night, giving us a figure that boggles the mind: That monkey has played you approximately 575,000 songs. Since the machine cycles through five individual songs, that means you’ve been exposed to the same five tunes 115,000 times each.

I hope no mandatory reporters are reading this; I’m pretty sure there are laws against subjecting a child to that amount of anything. What effect does that have on one’s psyche? Will you wake up one morning, à la Dexter’s Laboratory, and instead of having a vocabulary reduced to “omelette du fromage,” only be able to speak in “Twinkle Twinkle”?

Amazingly, we’ve had spells where you, dear daughter, asked for even more music. For the better part of two years, you’d only go to sleep if I were singing or humming “You Are My Sunshine.” So the monkey music would be going, and then I’d do my best to superimpose “You Are My Sunshine” over the top of Brahm’s melodies. It was no symphony, let me tell you. But then, in one of those silly bedtime twists, you gave up on “You Are My Sunshine” one day and instead wanted to hear “The Wheels on the Bus”—not just any version, though. It had to be by Raffi, on Alexa, and on repeat. That’s right. We’d been injecting your brains with 100,000 repetitions of the same five songs all your life, and now you were asking for another song, in an entirely different key and tempo, to play simultaneously without ceasing. Uh, what?

The “Wheels on the Bus” shenanigans eventually faded, and now you’re back to one song at a time. Even so, the notion of a music-free bedtime is entirely foreign to our household. It’s hard to imagine life without the monkey.

And yet, when you returned from Grandma and Grandpa’s, that was precisely the reality we had to face.

Your first night back, it was around 2 a.m. when I awoke to you, my boy, standing beside me, stirred, perhaps, by some monkeyless nightmare. As I carried you back to bed, I felt an alien silence filling your room. I was conscientious of my own tiptoe steps, each movement stark and exposed without the warm blanket of lullabies cushioning the walls. Instead of returning you to your cozy room, it was as if I were depositing you in a ghost town, an eerily noiseless place once inhabited by humans.

To my surprise and relief, after that one hiccup, you two slept soundly (no pun intended) till we got the monkey back. You didn’t even ask about it, in fact. Your grandparents returned it to us a few days later, and we’ve been using it again ever since, racking up the song tally by the dozens.

Which makes me wonder: If you sleep fine with the monkey and you sleep fine without the monkey, then who is this whole monkey routine for, anyway? Might the consistencies we build into your lives be as much for our comfort as your own?

In any event, the whole monkey episode got me thinking about the many routines of my own life, playing like background music in each scene. Perhaps because “routine” comes from “route” (which, notably, also yields the word “rut”), I associate many of my life stages with commutes of one kind or another.

I think of hauling my saxophone case across the Friendly Hills neighborhood in Morrison, Colorado, to get to school in sixth grade, my fingers chapped in wintertime from the biting air.

I think of my teenage summers washing windows, carpooling to the far corners of metro Denver to pristine neighborhoods where I’d shoulder ladders and plunge my hand in and out of a sudsy 6-gallon bucket all day long.

I think of my semester abroad in Montpellier, France, counting the tram stops to downtown or walking up the great hill to my dorm while carrying bags overstuffed with Carrefour groceries.

I think of trudging through Indiana winter from my cheap rental in Lafayette to the well-manicured campus of Purdue University, an ombré of icy slush soaking into the khakis I’d wear to teach my class.

When I look back on these and other routines, there is usually some degree of drudgery and challenge—and, in my memory, a paradoxical play of mundane and vivid. I can still feel the hot spots on my palm from carrying my sax. I can still recall my foreigner’s self-consciousness as I passed French bus stops and old Mediterranean-style homes.

For as uninteresting and trying as routines can be, they also have a way of branding themselves in our memory, shaping our experience, perhaps even our identity.

When I first started writing this piece, my son, your first year of preschool at the Hands On Children’s Museum was wrapping up. As much as you enjoyed your teachers and classmates and all the wonderful activities there, I myself sometimes tired of the preschool grind. You went four days a week for three and a half hours, and it was a 20-minute commute each way—make that 40 minutes each way, factoring in kid-wrangling—so that by the time I dropped you off and came back home, I was already thinking about leaving to pick you up again.

On the drive, we’d pass by the same strip of strip malls from Lacey to Olympia, get stuck at the same long lights. Coffee corner, train depot, Pool Guys Plus; Pool Guys Plus, train depot, coffee corner. For a while, you had designated Pacific Avenue’s underpass beneath I-5 as the official outer boundary of “Big Town City,” whatever that meant, and when we arrived at that spot, you’d always announce our entry. You’d talk to the buildings passing by and I’d have them talk back, putting on overwrought accents to distinguish one from the next.

“Hi, building!” you’d say.

“Howdy, partner! Where are you headin’ today?”

“To the children’s museum!”

“That sounds mighty fine.”

We’d pass another building.

“Hi, building!”

“G’day, ol’ chap! Where you off to today?”

“To the children’s museum!”

“Ah, capital!”

We’d pass another building.

At the time, playing these games with you was kind of fun but also kind of a chore, like teaching you a knock-knock joke: a pure delight the first time, a fading amusement repetitions two through twenty, and from then on a very particular brand of purgatory.

Now, though, several months removed from that routine, those moments, predictable as they were, glisten with magic. It’s not just nostalgia, either. I mean, it is nostalgia; if you haven’t noticed, I can muster nostalgia about pretty much anything. If I get wistful thinking about window washing, you can bet I’ll long for the days of car seat insertions and extractions, of “Wheels on the Bus” ad infinitum,of passing through Big Town City.

But it’s more than nostalgia. I want to say that these routines represent something profound—a stage in your development, a distinct moment and place. While that’s true, it’s more than that, too. Our daily rhythms and repetitions don’t simply represent something. They are the something. The routine is not just a metaphor for our lives; it is our lives, the daily stroke of the brush that, eventually, fills the whole canvas.

The adage goes that variety is the spice of life. I get it. Without change, without adventure, without challenge, we wilt. But what good is spice if you’ve got no food? The routine is the meat and potatoes, the staples that sustain us. There’s a reason that in the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus’s first request to the Father is for our daily bread. The day-to-day matters, physically, practically, spiritually. No wonder people refer to their faith life as their “walk”—how else can we get from where we are to where we’re going?

In my daily walk as your father, I can choose between two basic perspectives: I can relish the routine or I can resent the rut. If I choose to see it as rut, I’m stuck in the dirt, head down, chewing on small thoughts like This again? When will this end? Isn’t there something bigger? If I choose to relish the routine, I lift my gaze, aiming for the bird’s eye view; I discern a pattern in the earth—or several overlapping patterns, mine and Mom’s and yours—intricate, curving, looping, maybe even spelling something. I think larger thoughts, like This is our present. This one day will end. This is pointing to something. Rut or routine: Either we wander this planet pointlessly, or there is meaning in our daily walk.

The routine can be unglamorous, tiresome, mundane. It can be as mind-numbing as a five-song soundtrack played continuously for five years straight. But in the scarcity and shape of it, in its vividness, I sense a miracle as humble as bread—life itself, walked out step by step. To share this patch of dirt with you, to trace the same curves and bends, to etch our markings into the earth—this is a gift far more enduring than any single day.

Life Outside the Marble

Beloved children,

I am in Chicago, and you are in Raymond, Washington. Google tells me it’d take 32 hours to drive the 2,144 miles to get to you. It’s the farthest I’ve ever been from you, and for the longest amount of time.

Mom has a work retreat here, and we tacked on a visit with your great-grandmother outside Milwaukee. That, plus a short visit with some old Chicago friends, means that Mom and I are spending a whole week away from you two. Sometime in the future, that may not sound so significant, but with our current lifestyle, when I am with you all day every day, a week apart feels like an Apollo mission.

Before Mom and I left, I worried about the trip every night for weeks. I’m not the type to fixate on apocalyptic possibilities; that’s more Mom’s style, imagining nightmare scenarios like our plane crashing or you breaking an arm or something. My anxieties were more modest. What kind of routine would you fall into? Would you be angry with us? Would you feel abandoned? Would you wake up at night crying and homesick?

So far (five days into our seven-day trip, as I write this), none of those worries appear to be materializing—at least not from what Grandma and Grandpa report. That’s one strange thing: I don’t really know what you’re up to. There’s FaceTime, and there’s Marco Polo, and there’s texts, but what’s really going on exists in a black box. I lack the usual indicators. There is no background chatter between brother and sister as I wash the dishes, no requests for games, no demands for food, no children’s songs on Alexa, no makeshift percussion instruments created from things not meant to be hit. It’s odd not to hear you constantly.

The one question that remains to be answered, of course, is how you will adjust when we return. When Mom and I celebrated our wedding anniversary this August, you spent three nights at Grandma and Grandpa’s, and our reunion with you was a rough landing. You truly love visiting your grandparents, and they take wonderful, over-the-top, doting care of you, but still—a rough landing.

Sister, the happy-go-lucky two-year-old you are, you had an okay time of it—extra clingy, extra needy, but that’s about it. Brother, you, on the other hand, had some major emotions built up and unexpressed. They didn’t come out of your mouth; they came out with multiple meltdowns a day, with shouting and sullenness, and with a professional-grade, multi-day round of the silent treatment specially reserved for me.

Finally, after a few days, you found some words that fit your feelings. At bedtime one night, you begged us to stay with you because you were scared.

“Do you want us to leave a light on?” we asked.

“No, I’m not scared of the dark,” you replied. “I’m scared of not being with you.”

Ah. There it was. I taught you the phrase “separation anxiety,” and we agreed to have one of us check on you after a few minutes. That helped you relax. We’ve added the nightly check-in to the bedtime routine since then.

When Mom and I return from Chicago, who knows what cocktail of emotions will have fizzed and bubbled inside you, or what measures we’ll need to instate to relieve the pressure. We’ll all survive, though. Kids have been spending time away from their parents for all of human existence, right? Plus, there’s a good chance you won’t even remember the time away when you’re older, and if you do, at least we know you’ve been safe and cared for with family.

These, by the way, are the sorts of things parents repeat to themselves to assuage their guilt.

In the meantime, as strange as this separation is, I’ve gotten to enjoy an extremely rare experience in my day-to-day life: time to myself. Lots of it, too. Mom has three solid days of meetings with her coworkers, so I find myself with hours on my hands, no schedule to follow, no children to care for, no agenda whatsoever.

While this amount of free time is unprecedented for me (at least since I became a father), I have had tastes of it before. It’s like seeing an eclipse, it’s so rare and surreal. The first time I remember it happening was when Mom and I escaped to Portland for a night while you stayed with your grandparents. We were in a Buffalo Exchange, and while Mom tried on clothes in the fitting room, I stood next to a rack and compared two pairs of shoes for a good ten minutes uninterrupted, not sure I’d buy anything but taking my sweet time looking at each one.

It’s silly to say, but that moment felt incredibly luxurious. It was almost prodigal, like I had finished a meal and could just throw away the plate. How decadent it was to have time to myself, unpressured and responsibility-free. At one point in my life, such moments were cereal; now they are filet mignon.

Call it self-care, call it selfishness—for as much as I love and adore you both, in these moments to myself, I find a delightful aimlessness. At home with you, I’m always aiming, always moving with purpose. I’m washing dishes, or prepping the next meal, or planning an outing, or coaxing you to put on shoes, or filling paint cups with water and brushes, or mediating a conflict, or reading a stack of books, or turning your underwear right-side in, or reminding you again to say “please,” or any of the thousand things that make up our life together.

So, on a vacation like this, I wander. I roam. I dilly dally. In my normal routine, such verbs feel impossible.

Today I jogged to the Chicago Public Library. I was like a chocolate connoisseur, taking pretentiously longer than needed to savor the delicacy. I browsed heartily, reading not just the back-cover synopses but indulging in whole pages of reviews. I came across a newspaper, read a music review beginning to end. I found the sports section and consumed an entire article, turned the page, then flipped back to enjoy a passage again, just because I could.

Normally, my visits to the library with you entail a combination of paring down our haul of books to a manageable weight, escorting you to the bathroom for emergency poops, and making sure you don’t initiate a self-destruct sequence on the catalog computers.

I exaggerate, a little. You’re generally amazing kids, and I generally love going to the library with you. Still, the notion of visiting the fiction section, let alone stopping to read whole passages—whole passages!—would never cross my mind.

So here I am in Chicago, hardly saving the world, but not feeling like I need to, either. When I get back home, there’ll be stories to tell and feelings to unpack and routines to rebuild. There’ll be photos to see and fears to allay and cuddles to share. There will be the ordinary yet precious jewel that is our life together, insular yet invaluable, like a world contained within a marble. It’s healthy for me to get outside it from time to time, to dawdle elsewhere. But to our life together I’ll soon return, and there I’ll happily linger.



P.S. I’m posting this a couple weeks after Mom and I came home, and you both did great with the transition back—no silent treatment, no massive meltdowns. Granted, we prepared better this time. We talked a lot about the trip beforehand, made sure you had a clear idea of what was happening. More importantly, perhaps, we got you a bunch of gifts. If you can’t have mommy and daddy, may as well have Dollar Tree presents from mommy and daddy. We sent you with one gift bag per day we were gone, partly to remind you of us and partly to help Grandma and Grandpa keep you entertained. Do I, the historically stingy, anti-consumerism person I am, feel good about fighting separation anxiety with material things? Actually, yeah. I feel fine about it; it worked beautifully. In the videos of you opening each package, you looked ecstatic.

And hey, maybe the gifts had little to do with the good transition. Maybe you’re just growing up, discovering flexibility that you didn’t know you had, or that I didn’t know you had. Maybe—gasp—you need me less than I think you do.

Nah. Let’s say it was the gifts.



P.P.S. Obviously, Mom and I couldn’t have left you in Washington for this kind of a trip without big-time help from loved ones. Some good friends of ours were kind enough to watch you at our house for the weekend before Grandma and Grandpa had you at their house for five nights—“Camp Raymond,” we called it. It was a huge undertaking, but they were so happy to have you. In case you missed it, your grandparents love you very, very much.

If you have kids one day, we’ll owe you some big babysitting favors.

Purple Balloon Suspended at Bedtime

Beloved daughter,

Bedtime was different tonight. Normally, we read three or four books as the light on your sunset alarm clock dims, and then I pray, sing you a song, and lay you down.

Tonight, halfway through our first book, you scrambled off my lap in search of something—I assumed a different book, until you went behind the rocking chair and found a big purple balloon that had wandered in earlier in the day. Mom and I have had our share of sleep struggles with you, and so I’ve read my share of baby bedtime articles. I know that the less stimulation at bedtime, the better.

This time, though, I couldn’t help but let you go on. As your lullaby monkey carried on its sleepy tune, you did a little dance around your room, bear-hugging that balloon and tossing it up in the air, then watching it with glee as it drifted back down. Sometimes you’d look at me instead, smiling, and the balloon would fall behind you or plop onto your head.

I realized as I watched you, the light growing dimmer by the minute, that part of the moment’s magic was its relative silence. There was the soft padding of your footed pajamas atop the carpet and the twinkle of the lullabies, but unlike any such scene with your brother nowadays, there was no talking. It was just a girl and her balloon and her daddy looking on, delighting in her delight.

These wordless moments with you don’t feel as if they are without words; they feel beyond words.

Such moments are an increasingly rare commodity as your vocabulary blooms. You now know quite a few words—up, water, cheese, please (a common combo, those last two), and of course brother, mama, and dada, to name a few. Even when you’re not using words I recognize, you’re often talking, telling stories and describing the world around you in a tongue familiar to me yet indecipherable. And when it comes to listening, your comprehension is off the charts. You are definitely in that Baby Groot phase of communication, eager to show off how much you understand and unafraid to make mistakes.

For as much as I love your adorable voice and the funny-sounding words emerging from your mouth, I am already starting to miss my pre-language daughter. And though I want you to keep growing and learning every day—I couldn’t stop you if I tried—there is part of me that is glad you’ve been behind in learning to speak, part of me that grasps the blessing of slowness.

Bedtimes like tonight’s are a gift. It is a gift that Mom and I get a few more moments before the busyness of a young tongue kicks in, a gift that we can walk wordless with you just a little longer, that I get to witness the occasional blissful balloon bedtime, that I can deceive myself in the lowering light, lulled by the soft melodies of babyhood, that perhaps the purple balloon floating above your smiling face somehow won’t fall back down.