It is obviously an understatement to say that I frequently write about Schuyler.
Before she was born, I was a pretty selfish person. It made my writing fun, I suppose, but not in a way that was going to enrich anyone's life. I wrote about me, and how the world affected me, and what the world owed me, and occasionally I might wander off topic briefly, only to suddenly realize that we weren't talking about me anymore.
After we found out that Schuyler was coming, I was still writing about me, but suddenly it was about this baby and how she was growing and how scared I was and how I didn't have a clue what to do and how, yes, I was afraid of all the things that could go wrong with her, never guessing that the thing that would become her bane had already formed and was simply going to sit there for almost four years waiting to be noticed.
After she was born, I wrote about her a lot, in the way you write about babies. They don't do much worth writing about. They shit and cry and scare you and occasionally do something vaguely human-like. So in writing about her, I was still writing about me.
And then she turned into a little girl, and then a little girl who didn't talk, and then a little girl being tested by big Yale medical brains, and finally she was a little girl with a monster living in her head, its invisible hand clapped firmly and immovably over her mouth.
And at some point, she became the thing I wrote about most of all. In February, realizing this and wanting to say more in less time, I gave up all pretenses of being independently interesting myself, and I moved my writing to a blog, and named it after Schuyler and me. And here we are.
So yes. I write about Schuyler. And yet, I'm not sure how well I do, because different people have different ideas of who she is, based on my words. Some people get it right, and some people get it wildly wrong. Schuyler's hard to describe. I'll spend the rest of my life trying.
We watched her at play in one of those big indoor playgrounds today. One reason, as I wrote last time, that I will never hit her (as if I need a list) is that Schuyler is a courageous girl, and I don't want the first thing she learns to fear to be me. Her fearlessness is astounding, and one of the things of which I am the most proud of. We went to see a movie today, and we had our misgivings about how scary it might be for her. Once again, she loved the movie and embraced its monsters as her own.
(I'm not in love with hearing everyone's criticism of the movies we take her to, but I'll simply say that in her usual "everyone gets a role in the movie" way, she has now determined that she is the Captain, complete with bold swagger and a hearty "Arrr!", I am Davy Jones (with little fingers miming the tentacles on my face), and poor Julie is none other than the Kraken. She's less than thrilled by that, but honestly, I'm jealous. Who wouldn't want to be the Kraken?)
It's hard to describe Schuyler's fearlessness, or her bursting optimism, her almost constant good mood and her complete and total lack of shyness. I can't think of a person I know with more cause to wake up in a shitty mood than Schuyler, no one who has a better reason to go outside and shake her angry fists at the sky, cursing God unintelligibly. And yet, she never does. She gets frustrated, she occasionally throws up her hands in exasperation, but she moves on. And I wish you could know her, every one of you, even those of you who say unkind things about her and about me, because I can't win you over (and I don't always want to), but she could. She would.
I was thinking about this earlier, and I decided to add a few links to the sidebar, links to things that other people who know Schuyler have written about her. They were written by our friends, and hers. I don't tell them often enough how much I love them, but I do. These entries mostly revolve around the time when Schuyler was diagnosed, or after we went to Chicago to meet with Dr. Dobyns and instead of hope, we got handed the full measure of her monster.
I hope you'll go read them.
Schuyler's hair has almost faded back to its original color, and since she's swimming in a chlorinated pool every day at camp, we've held off on coloring it again. But she's asking. She watches her favorite characters on kid shows like The Doodlebops and the ever-weird LazyTown, and if you're bold enough to follow those links, you'll see what those characters have in common. And you'll probably be able to figure out what Schuyler's been asking for.
You should know by now that our answer is probably going to be yes.
29 comments:
You are each lucky to have and love each other. As seen on TV, a mother said "if your grandmother can have blue hair I see no reason why you can't have pink." Have fun at the salon.
I just wanted to let you know that she already has won a lot of us over, through your words and the pictures of Schuyler that you post. I think she is an incredible kid, and that you and Julie are doing a great job parenting her. Some of us do understand, at least as well as we can without having ever met her in person.
Do whatever color she wants, after the chlorine of course. Love those characters you linked. Put more color into our world, we need all we can get. You are a terrific writer and I enjoy reading about your wonderful family.
Schuyler is is one of two people in the blog world that I really wish I knew in real life (the other is Heather Armstrong, just because she's so damned smart and funny).
I can't imagine how wonderful, though heartbreaking, it is to know Schuyler. She is one of a kind and that's SOMETHING in this world of people trying to be something they aren't.
Bring on the pink hair.
It always amazes me that children with chronic issues of any kind are generally just happy kids, like most all other kids. My daughter has type 1 diabetes, and while it's nothing like the condition your daughter has, it's still a lot for a little kid to deal with. But she does, uncomplainingly, every day. It's just her life.
A summer of chlorine will probably make the color a lot brighter on Schuyler's hair than the last time. In other words, looking forward to pictures!
What *is* it about Stephanie on Lazy Town? My own kid, who loves dinosaurs and Legos more than she's ever liked Barbie, is similarly enamored with her. I dread the day she figures out that Stephanie wears almost as much mascara as Tammy Faye Bakker.
Or that Sportacus has that creepy Uncle Frank child molester vibe going...
julia---"it's just her life." that is really, really right.
Schuyler (and you) are awesome. Love you guys! I love that she loves monsters and is courageous and loves life and fights back and just lives. I just wrote a post about my own childhood - my own monsters. I have spina bifida, wear leg braces, have a limp, and am just "different" from most everyone else. Yet I had a happy, normal childhood. Life is what it is - I had nothing taken away from me, so I don't miss what I never had. Much like Schuyler is and will continue to be, I presume. Thanks for writing about her, for treating her like any other kid, for not wimping out with her, for just being a great parent. She's going to be one spit-fire person (she already is). And that's a great, wonderful, lovely thing.
Amy :)
I think you are doing a great job raising Schuyler. All kids have meltdowns from time to time. I certainly would be worried if mine didn't! I can't imagine what it would be like to have a "perfect" child.
Looking forward to seeing the pink hair :) I get that weird feeling about Sportacus, too...
Just admit you are raising a raver.
Actually, if you can edit out a far amount of it I just watched " The Legend of Leigh Bowery" she would love the costumes. But some of the nudity might bring about questions. Maybe just wait until she is older..........
Red, purple, now pink! I love your girl's taste in hair color!
Bring on SportaSchuyler! (Is it wrong that I think Sportacus is hot?)
I don't know if it's wrong, but Julie is right there with you on Sportacus and his Icelandic package.
I love your blog, inspiring for us all . She's the bravest little person, and I have the strongest belief that you and Julie are doing the very best thing for her simply by being the loving and headstrong people that you are. You face it, and don't shy away, therefore u are instilling that in her. Kudos!
I love Schuyler's hair colours.
And just think, when she becomes a rebellious teenager, hair dyeing has already been okay'd and therefore will not be cool! Now you just get her some piercings and a tattoo, and no worries!
Long live the Pink-Haired Pirate.
Your words are amazingly comforting to me and Schuyler is so lucky to have you... I too have a child that is amazing in his own way, a kid that has become his own, a one in a million... It isn't easy to always find the positive, take the love they have to offer, rejoice in their progress and remind yourself that everyone has a beautiful place in this wonderful world... My son is 21 now and has found a love for art, for a kid that is 6'ft 4" and can't do a jumping jack, ride a bike or spell his name for the world to read; he has found art and people that understand who he is and it is such joy to see happiness that I always worried he would not have... So enjoy your monster and show her the world! You are doing a wonderful job and thanks a million for sharing your beautiful daughter.. :o)
I don't even have any kids (not by choice, but let's not go THERE, shall we?) but my boyfriend and I accidently discovered Lazytown one Sunday morning at, like 7 am. We were kind of horrifyedly transfixed (is that a word?) (I'm feeling a little parenthetical today, feel free to edit). I definitely think there is something inappropriate about the way Sportacus dances with Stephanie.
I definitely think there is something inappropriate about the way Sportacus dances with Stephanie.
See? See? Julie, if you are reading this, SEE? I've been saying that their little dace sequences are creepy all along, and Julie just thinks I'm jaded.
I don't know. Maybe that's how they do things in Iceland. Cold nights, six months of dark winter, etc.
Hooray for the pink hair!
My stink-child is thus far contented with the Stephanie-pink wig. But I think it's just because she doesn't know that hair dye exists.
I'm actually glad you bring her to those kinds of movies. So many parents try to build this bubble around their kid and, in my opinion, end up screwing their kids up. Bad words exist, sexual inuendo exists and monsters and scary stuff exists in the world. I'm not saying you should stick your kid into a theater showing a porn flick, but I also don't think you can give your kids the impression that we live in a cartoon world, where everything wraps up in a nice neat package at the end of an hour.
And I think that as hard as you try to keep kids away from stuff, they end up figuring it out anyway. It's better they find out around their parents, who can explain it to them, than on their own. Ya know.
Geez, my mom gave me some temporary orange hair dye when I was a kid, but it was just for Halloween and playing around at home- I wasn't allowed to go to school with it in my hair! You and Julie officially rank as "fun parents". And even money says Schuyler grows up to be an artist of some sort.
I would love to get to know the whole Rummel-Hudson family -- and I think Schuyler will look great with bubble-gum colored hair!
I don't know you, and I jumped on the darn tootin' wagon late: you were already all about Schuyler when I did.
I still must gush: you're a great writer and an even better father, and Schuyler is an absolutely amazing little girl, monster be damned.
oh my~ i hope i'm one of those people that "gets" her, i feel like i am! it would be great to meet her, and i am so glad @ her fearlessness and optimism and i'm sure that's comforting to you and julie and gives you a small dose of hope in a sometimes bleak reality.
i love it that she loves the "pirates" movie. i only just watched the first one last week when layed up with kidney stones, and my kids and i are IN LOVE!! we just haven't had time to go see the new one, they are 5, 7, and 10. i'm not too worried about the 5 year old. when he starts to seem scared we always ask him if it is fiction or not. he knows the difference of real/not real and i think that helps.
she's your kid~ you OBVIOUSLY wouldn't take her if she got scared from it!
I love how she inspires you. I am sorry that it is from her suffering, but i think it is a fantastic thing to be inspired by your child.
also you said this: Schuyler is a courageous girl, and I don't want the first thing she learns to fear to be me.
i obeyed my parents, because i feared them, feared them because they were so angry when they spanked me.
this is not the way for a child to obey their parents. they need to obey their parents out of respect and because it is right. we have been able to achieve that pretty well with our kids without spanking. many people tell us what well behaved kids we have and adults genuinely enjoy spending time with them, so it's not just me tooting my no spanking horn!
I look forward to the "first day of school" pink hair pictures. Purple and red both looked great.
As a teacher, I love kids in general (the same way that dog-lovers will fall in love with just about any dog they see, I want to talk to and play with every kid I meet). But Schuyler has that intangible quality that draws me to a child...there's a twinkle in her eye, a wise quality in her smile and a general joy about her that comes across in pictures and stories. I'm grateful to "know" her through this blog. Thanks for sharing her.
I love you, too, Rob. And miss you guys to pieces. Give Julie and Schuyler a hug from me!
Do most young children know that being angry at God or whoever and raising their tiny fists in defiance is an option?
Awww! ...here thru random surfing, keyword "LazyTown" :D After reading the post and its comments, just awww... I have a fanmade LT musicvideo you might like, to a song called "What Makes You Different Makes You Beautiful" - hope it makes you smile ^-^ http://youtube.com/SimbiAni
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