In honor of opening weekend of Mary Poppins and my son Syrus who was born six years ago on opening night, happy birthday, my sweet boy.
My Own Little Mary Poppins
The first movie I saw at the
drive-in was Mary Poppins. I remember peering through the hazy
windshield of a 1970s maroon van, sandwiched between my mom and dad, and
smiling as Jane and Michael Banks jumped freely and lightly into paintings and
sang about spoons full of sugar and words like
supercalifragilisticexpialidocious. I was
mesmerized by Mary Poppins who created a magical world where doing chores
wasn’t so bad, musical numbers with penguins were a must, and moms and dads discovered
what is really important in life – like making time to fly a kite and play
games and tuck kids in bed at night.
And who would have thought
that one day, I would get one of my own -- my own little version of Mary
Poppins to remind me what’s important. He
is a little boy named Syrus. He doesn’t
come with a trick carpetbag and iconic umbrella. He doesn’t fly in with a bunch of clever
quips and memorable outings. No, he comes with a limited vocabulary and a simple
daily request: “Mom, get me!” And yet, it is this sweet command that has a
Mary-Poppins-like magic when listened to and obeyed, and does exactly what Jane
and Michael Banks were hoping for from their parents. “Mom, get me.” Pursue me, know me, hear me, understand me,
value me. Get me.
My son Syrus is essentially
non-verbal – his speech has always been a source of frustration for him and me
as his apraxia diagnosis means that he knows what he wants to say but he can’t
get his muscles to form the words he is desperately trying to communicate. So, when my son waltzes into the kitchen, and
announces with a sly grin and an unforced rhythm, “Mom, get me!” I can’t help
but spring into action. The sheer
delight those words offer to a mom who prays every night that words will come
from her son’s mouth cannot be described.
And yet, the fact that THESE (Mom, get me) are the three words that my
son utters, I believe to be no accident.
They are what Jane and Michael Banks wanted from their parents, what we
all wanted as children, what we still want today. Pursue me.
Know me. Understand me. Walk with me. Value me. Love me.
What my son means when he
yells, “Mom, get me,” is “Mom, chase me.”
Come get me and chase me around the house. Enter into my world. Be a kid with me – play the way that I want
to play, not the way you wish I could or would play. As I run after him around the house, he
repeatedly looks over his shoulder with a wide grin, making sure I am still
there, still chasing, still running, still wanting to get him. He wants me to follow him – to let him lead
and see me follow. Syrus loves that part
– the part where my eyes are only on him and he is all I can see, not
distracted or pulled away by phone calls and emails and to-do lists -- where I
am there, really there with him. And
after multiple laps around the kitchen island and stuffed couch, he flings
himself on the cushions and waits for me, giggling and beaming, until we are
nose-to-nose. “Mom, love me.” Don’t
worry about my speech and my future; don’t focus on all the things that I can’t
do. Spend time with me here, work with
me just as I am, and love this version of me.
The version I am right now – I’ll only be this kid for so long. And after we have laughed and wrestled and
sung a few rounds of a favorite Mary Poppins tune (usually “Jolly Holiday”),
Syrus stands up and looks me in the eye, and promptly says again (for the
hundredth time, though it never gets old), “Mom, get me.” And we’re off again.
This is the story of our
lives, isn’t it? We long to be understood, pursued, known, valued, chased, loved
– for someone to get us. Syrus asks me
every day to get him. And I ask it,
too. Like Jane and Michael Banks, like
Syrus Burick, I want someone to get me.
To keep company with me, to enter into my space and life and heart and
really see who I am today and love that version of me, today’s version, for
that is who I am right now. We all
are. We live messy lives where hardships
come and we muddle through. Our
priorities are at times askew and we lose are tempers and run on empty and
could all use a nanny, a caregiver if you will, to come in and pave the way for
us to get back on the right track. I
think I feel like that most days – a need for grace, a desire to rest and be
cared for and tucked in at night and reminded that someone gets me.
And I find that I often forget
that there is One who is in constant pursuit around the kitchen island after
me, who knows me (the today version, and even the yesterday and tomorrow
version) and nods His understanding over and over again, and loves me, oh how
He loves me in a way that makes me want to chase after Him because every day,
as I am asking Him to get me, He is replying, “ Come
to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take
a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the
unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you.
Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.” (Matthew
11:28-30)



Once again - beautiful Corbett!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed this! Thanks for sharing a peek into your world and an infinite truth.
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