Memories IV
LG Memories
LG didn’t crawl until she was 12 months old. You could set her in the middle of the room, leave for five minutes and come back to find her sitting in the exact same spot. I don’t know if this was because she felt like she could be carried wherever she needed to go, or if it was just because she was building up to moving on her own terms. Either way, once she did start crawling, it was like someone had poured grease all over her and stuck her on an ice rink.
She could move – I have never seen any baby move so fast. I know I’ve talked about this before, but every time I think about it, it amazes me. She’d put her head down, then be off like a shot – a combination of tank and Ferrari, barreling through anything in her way. If she were to run into anything – dog, wall, fridge, leg – she would just switch direction and continue on. It was absolutely crazy, and completely the opposite of how she had once been. Gone were the days of calm contemplation, no more sitting around… once she was on the floor, she was gone. If you weren’t looking at her for five seconds, it’d be a chore to find her. Our house is not that big, 1100 square feet, but somehow she’d manage to elude capture for minutes at a time, and that was with 3 doors closed to bedrooms and the bathroom.
The crawling phase didn’t last too long, perhaps a month, maybe two, then she was walking. This was actually somewhat of a relief, since it slowed her down considerably. People thought that since she was walking & upright we’d really be in trouble, ‘cause she could now reach shelves, but she’d already been pulling herself up for a while, and pulling things off any shelf she could reach. Really it was a bit of a relief, though you could tell the speed was frustrating to her – she’d often switch back to supercrawl when she really wanted to go somewhere or get away. Slower was definitely better.
Until she learned to run… oy…
LD Memories
This wasn’t a memory of mine so much as a recollection that L told me about, when LD was around the same age LG is now. LD has always been a social kid, never being too shy around strangers (not always a good thing, but I’m glad he has a positive outlook on life). Still, there were some people he would just naturally gravitate to; I don’t know if he was sensing something special in them or if it was just a random happening, but there were definitely some people he instinctively trusted more than others.
We were living in Atlanta (ok, in Decatur, just on the other side of the border, near a MARTA stop), and I was on my rotations at Southwest Hospital. I was gone a lot, so L & LD had a lot of time together. One day, L took the little guy to a local mall. This mall had a train that kids could ride. It was a cute little thing, about a half dozen “cars” and it ran the length of the mall; I don’t know if it was on tracks or if it was just running free, but LD loved going on it. On this one particular occasion, there were apparently not many kids on the train, it being the middle of the week, and it was being run by a big, burly man in his 50’s with a few tattoos and gerri curls, according to L. She said that he looked like he was just there, not really enjoying it, not mean or mad, but it looked like not many people talked to him very often.
L told me that when LD saw the train, the first thing he did was go up to the conductor, put his little arms out and say “Up.” L said that the man broke out into a wide grin, and that he looked genuinely touched. He reached down & picked Little Dude, babbling at him for a couple of minutes before setting him back down. L thought that it was great – she wished she’d had a camera (remember, this was before the time when cellphones had cameras built in). I thought it was hilarious, and every other time I took LD to the train, I kept an eye out for the conductor, but we never came across him again.

