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A
Jeep in Bethlehem
By Tiffany Lewis
I have a confession to make. I am a power shovel
chaser.
This is akin to an ambulance chaser, but because Caterpillars
don’t move as fast, it’s not nearly as harrowing.
And I think it’s legal.
I used to drive past construction sites oblivious and
indifferent. But now I have a two-year-old. He
is a boy. This means his entire life is consumed by
cars and trucks.
I first noticed this fascination when he was about a
year old. Walking to the beach one day, he spied
a large truck, sat up in this stroller and said, “Brrrr-brrr.”
Up to that point I had never made a truck sound in my
life. How did he know what to do?
We live on Miami Beach, where condos are always being
razed and replaced by new, fancier, taller ones.
Hence, there is always construction. As we drive,
my son gives a running commentary.
“Cherry picker truck! I SEE A CHERRY PICKER TRUCK
…Cement truck! Red cement truck … TWO CRANES.
A police car with sirens. I see a police car!
Look, Mommy, do you see um?”
If I don’t acknowledge his fabulous find right away,
I get to hear about it, at fifteen decibels, for ten
more minutes.
Sometimes he seems to conjure these machines out of
thin air. One day we were driving through a residential
neighborhood on the way to the park. We hadn’t
seen a single exciting truck. Jackson began complaining.
“I-wanna-see-a-power-shovel-
I-wanna-see-a-power-shovel.”
“Jackson,” I said, “this is not an area with power shovels.”
As I spoke, we turned the corner to discover the entire
road dug up and two massive Caterpillar front-loaders
digging in the dirt. “Power shovel!” Jackson cried,
nearly bursting out of his carseat.
On the way home he began complaining to see a cherry
picker truck.
“Jackson, I don’t think we’re going to see a cherry picker truck,”
I explained. “They must have all gone home for a little
nap.” We drove a block, and there on the corner was a cherry
picker truck. (What exactly is a cherry picker truck, you may
ask? Wait until your son turns two — you will know.)
The little box was high in the air and a man inside was busy fixing
the telephone wires. I thought Jackson would explode with excitement.
But the vehicle closest to his heart is The Jeep. Jackson has
a love affair with a jeep that lives in our condo parking lot.
Every time he sees it he shouts, “My jeep! My jeep is home!” At
night he spends five minutes saying good night to it, singing
to it and pretending to hand it the essential bedtime blankies.
He finishes by telling it a Reader’s Digest version of “Jonah
and the whale.”
One day he came home from the park covered from head
to toe in what looked like black soot.
“What happened to him?” I asked my husband.
“Oh, he gave his jeep a hug,” he said nonchalantly,
as if this were completely normal.
On Monday I was busy making dinner. Jackson brought
over “The Story of Baby Jesus” and asked me to read
it. I assured him I would read as soon as I finished
making dinner. He sat down and began flipping through
the pages. I went back to chopping tomatoes. Suddenly
he shouted what sounded like, “Sheep!”
“Yes, sheep. The shepherds visited baby Jesus,” I said,
and continued chopping.
“No,” he said, pointing to a picture in the book. “Jeep!”
A jeep in the story of baby Jesus? This was worth investigating.
I put down the knife and went to look. Jackson pointed
to the page. And sure enough, tucked at the bottom of
the page, right next to the manger, was a little toy
car.
A jeep in Bethlehem. Your children teach you something
every day.
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© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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Tiffany
Lewis is the exhausted and proud mother of two active young boys,
Jackson (21/2) and Addison (approaching 1
year). They live in Miami Beach, Florida, where her husband, Seth,
works for The Miami Herald. They have not been hit by a hurricane
… yet.
Tiffany grew
up all over the country, most recently in Austin, Texas, and received
a bachelor’s degree in journalism from BYU. She and her husband
fell in love over the newsroom copy machine. They spent a glorious
summer doing internships in Washington, D.C. After graduating, they
moved to Miami, the last place on earth they thought they would
ever live.
Tiffany spends
the majority of her time hopping between the beach, the park, the
library, and the grocery store. Her stroller has already exceeded
the 200,000-mile marker. When the boys are asleep, she writes or
reads, and sometimes she cleans.
One of the things
that has helped Tiffany survive the rigors of motherhood is the
knowledge that there are millions of other mothers living a parallel
existence: with sleepless nights, piles of diapers, toilet paper
trails, temper tantrums and, of course, the joy of knowing you’re
doing the most important thing in the world. Happy mothering!
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