Today was Henry's 3 year check-up, also known as the well-child appointment. He did not want to go, which puzzled me, because he's always enjoyed going to the doctor. I think he just forgot what it was, because the doctor informed us that we hadn't been there since January 2008. This after having been frequent, frequent visitors in the many months of Henry's life preceding January due to chronic ear infections.
There is a point to this, sort of. I mean, as much of a point as there ever is. On the way to the doctor he was complaining and really trying to cry about having to go. My mom called while we were en route and asked where we were going, and I said: "I'm taking Henry to the doctor for his check-up." Henry yells from the back seat: "I do NOT have the hiccups, Mommy." Like I was taking him to the doctor for that.
Once there, though, he fell right back into his routine of trying his best to impress the doctor and nurse. He tinkled into the little cup. He sat still. He answered all their questions politely. He laughed at the doctor's jokes. He pointed at the otoscope and asked me "what dat ting called?" I told him I couldn't remember and said that I usually called it an "earlookerinner" and he laughed and said "you must be joking, Mommy." When the doctor returned, Henry asked him what it was called, and the doctor, who is Greek, told him the proper name, the Greek origins of the word, how people tend to mispronounce it, etc. Henry found it riveting. Maybe he's going to be a doctor. Or maybe he's just trying to impress the doctor because he thinks he's handsome. The doctor is handsome.
He was, of course, pronounced to be a fine specimen of a little boy. The doctor seemed so delighted with Henry, his proportions, his health, his verbal skills, that I just barely had the heart to voice my "concerns." What are they? Flakes on his scalp. Flat feet. Meh. It is nice when these are the things you are worried about.
You know what else is nice? When you imagine doomsday scenarios like a collapsed U.S. economy, revolution, riots in the streets. Then you inwardly grin when you think of how you and your little family would run to the hills of the Arkansas Ozarks and hole up with your extended family. You think how you'd be forced into doing things that you're really only a generation or two removed from anyway. You think that your dad is an excellent hunter and your husband is a natural marksman, your mom is an excellent gardner and that you'd enjoy managing a giant garden with her. You think how you'd all be piled in together, and that your husband would grow a beard. He looks really handsome with a beard. You think it would be hard but it would be good to be close to one another like that, rather than separated by all this terrain. Then you think you are deranged to be romanticizing what would genuinely be hardship. But then you think that being deranged like this could come in really handy and might even buoy those around you. You think that you are lucky that you are able to imagine your life without all the engines that seem to drive it and still feel hopeful and happy. You know that you aren't far gone enough to wish for something like this to happen, but you feel a sickeningly profound gratitude that you have this husband, these kids, these parents, these grandparents.
And then you think that someone might just calmly shoot you right between the eyes for saying all this out loud. Look at me! I'm lucky! And even when I'm not lucky, I'm happy! And I'm going to always be happy. Because I have all this, this happiness.


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