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Sometimes when I don’t blog for a while it’s because of a superstitious belief:  because everything is going well with Boo, I mustn’t write about it because it will break the streak of good, of happy, of laughter and kisses and hugs and learning.

Of course it is just superstition, but when you’re in my position you will cave to anything that works, or seems to work.  And that’s not the only reason anyway.  Without giving too much information about me, I had a hard February.  The kind of hard where I called a new psychiatrist for counseling and to adjust my meds and I called my OBGYN to figure out what the hell kind of hormonal changes are happening to me at the age of 44 1/2 to make me suicidal one day and joyful the next.  Menopause?  I already have osteoporosis and arthritis so why the hell not.

This will not do.

And so in the meantime I meditate and I pray and I work and I try to get outside – it’s so easy to hibernate most days when it is so damn cold and I work from home.  Some weeks the only time I go outside at all is to go visit Boo.

I didn’t even go to the advocacy thing I spoke about in my last post.  I was about as depressed as I get that day accompanied by a migraine that slammed me down into puking and crying.   Weakness.  My mind and my body betray me all the time, just when I’m ramped up to DO SOMETHING about all the low-functioning kids and their situations, just like mine before we were able to place Jonah at the Anderson Center for Autism.

And so for the first time in a month –  Two months?  – his school called me on Monday AND Tuesday to tell me that Jonah had gotten aggressive to the point that he needed “a two-person take-down” — meaning they’d had to subdue him physically.  Of course they know how to do it without harming the child, but someone always gets hurt in the process – usually a teacher or caregiver.  I suppose that’s better than another child, at least.

When I wrote to his room head teacher she told me she thinks it was because she was out sick on Monday, and on Tuesday there was a new child in the classroom.  Jonah does not do well at all with change.   Yet sometimes, as has happened many times in the past, there is no antecedent at all and we are left to wonder what the hell made him “flip out” for no reason we can discern.

It bursts my bubble again and again, and the longer Boo goes doing really well between aggressions, the bubble bursting hurts all the more.  Then again when I compare it to 3 years ago or so, I have to remind myself that it used to be 8-12 aggressions a DAY.  So I get out my trusty old bubble wand, blow some more bubbles, and hope.

He has been happy when my mom and I visit on Saturdays, dancing and singing and eating his lunch, taking his bath, requesting his Oompa Oompa, shrieking with joy, asking for car rides.  It’s our routine and he enjoys it.

Then I found a group on Facebook, thanks to an online friend, for people dealing with children who have “classic autism/severe autism.”  I expected the usual – a bunch of people arguing about diets and treatments and drugs, parents insisting “if you just do this you can cure your child of autism,” etc.  I was never so wrong in my life.  It was a light of love that I found — a place where you can say what is happening to you and your child without fear of judgement or blame.  A place where everyone affirms one another, cheers for the accomplishments and offers empathy for the disasters.  It is the best place with the best people I have ever found since Jonah was diagnosed, and I wish I’d found it long ago.

Because Asperger’s ain’t what we’re dealing with and yet that’s all anyone talks about in other groups, it always seems.  Parents bragging about their accomplishments, lifting their child(ren) out and away from the autism and into social groups and “regular” schools and how they take their child everywhere with them; that’s why their kids are doing so much better, don’t we see that?

I hate that shit.  I could never take Jonah anywhere with  me (in public) since the time he was a little baby, without facing stares and glares and the whole rest of it – my screaming, crying, unhappy Boo hating the car seat carrier, unable to participate in the little “music and movement” classes I’d enrolled us in before he was diagnosed.  Then, later, attacking random people in the mall, at the “family” restaurant, at parks and playgrounds.  And always the ugly glances, always the eyes boring into mine, the message loud and clear:  God what a bad parent she must be.  What a brat she’s got….until I prayed for winter to give us the perfect excuse to hibernate inside.

This new group is a cyber-world where I cry for others’ children and they cry for mine.  Where we offer each other suggestions and support but not any of that “I’m right and you’re wrong” bullshit.  Where we read one another’s stories, watch heartbreaking or joyful snippets of video, share blog posts, hugs, prayers, ideas, and love.   Where no one has to feel alone, or persecuted, or guilty.

I am so grateful to have found them, my fellow aliens on this planet of normalcy, so many of them suffering worse than I ever did, with other children to protect and deal with, often more than one on the spectrum, sometimes facing heart operations or other serious medical problems on top of all the other stresses.  God bless them all.  I don’t know how they do it but I do know how they do it — because life isn’t offering any of them a choice — you do it because you love your child(ren) beyond reason and would do anything to help them when they are suffering.

And so now I am no longer alone in this, not at all, not ever.

Yesterday when my mom and I visited, Jonah was happier than ever.  Laughing, giggling, smiling, lovey.  He pointed to the computer and asked for train and I put on an hour long video from YouTube with endless trains coming and going, coming and going, made by some rail fanner adult.  Boo sat mesmerized, first on my lap and then alone in the computer chair, alternately single-mindedly catching the visuals of the movement of the trains with a dumbstruck look on his face and smiling at the approach or departure of the train.  “Bye bye train!” I say, every time a train rounds a corner and disappears, only to be replaced with another approaching train.  Boo smiles, giggles, eagerly anticipating the next train.  Over and over.  Train after train.  When I had him on my lap I breathed him in at the back of his neck, gave him little mama kisses all over his shoulders, rubbed his back, whispered “mama loves you so much” into his ears.  I drink him up every time I see him like this.

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And, on his car ride, as happy as the song playing on the radio:  Happy by Pharrell Williams.

My mom and I left in a satisfied state of happy ourselves, both of us saying “thank God” as we get into the car to drive away from Andy’s apartment, where he and Jonah will have “quiet time” in the big blue bed, just lying together, and sometimes Jonah will take a nap.

Then, later, the daily phone call from Andy, always around 8:08pm, always just after he has called Jonah’s residence house to see how Jonah did that evening – on Saturdays, particularly, after Andy has dropped him back off.  The news wasn’t good this day.  Always Jonah cries a little and maybe tantrums as he is being brought back to his residence.  He likes his residence and has his favorite people there but still leaving daddy behind is hard for him.

This night his favorite staff members were not there, and he was angry, and did not want his dinner.  They have other foods to offer the kids and he asked for a bagel.  I want bagel please? he kept asking, over and over even after he’d been given one.  His voice gets more desperate and he cycles through a million things.  Bath?  Car ride?  Train?  Bagel?  Bagel?  Bagel? and he ramps up even more, torn between a mysterious desperation and an OCD-like anger and sadness.

Eventually he went into his room and was quiet for a while.  Then one caregiver heard banging and crashing, and when she went into his room he was kicking the walls and throwing items around, frenzied with the sadness/anger again.  When she gently asked him what was wrong he flung himself at her, attacking her, and eventually needing 3 people to get him under control.  Another bubble burst.

God forgive me but I am grateful I don’t have to see it, to be the one attacked anymore, to have the freedom of being removed from it all, physically if not emotionally.

I have gone from this scratched-up, bruised, beaten down person

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to this person

View More: http://ourtwohearts.pass.us/the-beautiful-amy

in three years.

I can’t believe the difference.

And Jonah has gone from this child:

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to this one:

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I have to remember that despite the setbacks, in general we are both so much better, so happier.

And if I am upset or confused or angry or sad, I know I now can reach out to my new peeps online in the Facebook group, and there will be understanding, there will be light.

I will try to post more often, superstition be damned…

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Hi everyone

Jonah and I and Andy have been living at my mom’s house since Jonah’s operation on Tuesday.  She has no Internet access so I am running home to pick up clothes and hurry back; Jonah needs constant vigilant attention right now.  Although the operation went well and he is okay (thank God), he is uncomfortable, often unbearably demanding (wanna go see train?  want breakfast sandwich?   want cupcake? — over and over, ad infinitum, and sometimes at all hours of the night), and, at times, extremely aggressive.

He has a follow-up appointment on Monday, after which we are going to try to bring him back to his residence.  My mom and Andy and I are scratched, bitten, kicked, and hit on a daily basis, and since Jonah MUST NOT touch his eye it takes all three of us to handle him.

When I return to write more it will be to express far more gratitude than I am feeling right at this moment.  I will say, for now, thank God for my mother – for without her I don’t know where we would be or what we would do.

Thank you to everyone who has reached out with caring support.  It means much more to us than you know.

pre-op, Jonah holding his ScareMeNot, Deep Breath Dudley

Pre-op, Jonah holding his ScareMeNot, Deep Breath Dudley, with daddy

waking up right after the operation

waking up right after the operation

During a calm moment -he got to see his beloved train...

During a calm moment -he got to see his beloved train…

Back as soon as I can be….

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I’m at work and my cell phone rings.  (If it’s the area code where Jonah lives now, my heart goes into my throat, even though they’re usually “only” calling to notify me, as they must, that Jonah was involved in an incident.  That means he probably scratched, bit, kicked, and pulled God knows how many people’s hair.  It means they had to physically restrain him to prevent him from hurting himself or others).

It is the area code, and they are calling me to relate an incident.  When we hang up I call Andy and tell myself to just go back to work.  There isn’t anything I can do.

For years, behaviorists and teachers, psychiatrists, Andy, me – everyone – has been searching for a pattern to Jonah’s aggressions, a cause.  A reason for all this.  It isn’t who he is, the violent kid trying to scratch your eyes out.  It isn’t who he is.  It is as frustrating as anything I’ve ever known.  I don’t want to think about it today.  I want to know my son without having to fear him as well.  Thank God the world is catching on and more & more is being done for people with autism.

They say Jonah loves the new temporary house.  He can see the river and the railroad tracks, and right there you’ve got two of his favorite things:  water and train.

Jonah, at the glaucoma appointment, wearing J's sunglasses, playing it cool

I’m taking a couple days to go offline and see Guster (again) for my last concert this tour.  If I’m lucky, the dreaded area code will not appear on my cell phone until I return.  Be well, Boo.  Your mama loves you.

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Thanks to everyone who left such valuable comments on garnering the information I want about residential facilities. I really appreciate it!

On Saturday I came over to the house in the morning to spend some time with Jonah Russell and give Andy a bit of a break.  At first Andy and I took him places together:  the usual litany of train and mall and grandma’s house, though Jonah no longer really cares whether the train comes or not (and sometimes declares “all done train” as soon as it does come), and Jonah has changed up the route through the mall (oftentimes not even making it all the way to the other end before deciding to turn around and start back, and – most surprisingly – declaring “no coin” at the wonderful brand-spanking new coin-funnel spin-down-the-drain structure; three months ago he would have begged for every coin on my person to throw down to whatever-good-cause)…

…but he never wavers from his desire to see grandma.  Our cat Sugarpuss now lives at grandma’s house because Jonah was attacking her, picking her up by her fur and once trying to grab her collar, nearly choking her. 

Sweet little sugarpuss, who we rescued from a back Albany alley in 1999 and who wants nothing more than to love and be loved, purring and meowing and mushing her face into your face.  My mom likes to read at night and Sugarpuss actually crams herself between my mom and her book, then tries to sleep on her head.  My mom’s other cat, Bootsie, doesn’t seem to mind Sugarpuss so much but Bootsie’s definitely been displaced somewhat.  When Jonah is at her house we watch him extra carefully around the cats, lest he produce his best imitation of a hiss and chase them.

One thing that’s definitely increased by leaps and bounds is the amount of baths Jonah wants every day.  We can bathe him in our house and arrive at grandma’s with his hair barely dry, yet he’ll enter her house, run up the stairs, and immediately declare his desire:  bath!

It is no hyperbole to tell you some days he takes 6-10 baths a day.  And here we have certain rules and games and necessities as well – usually only one of us can be sitting in there with him, and sometimes we are all banned:  no grandma!  no daddy!  no mama! or, if he decides he wants one of us, hey daddy?! 

Then there are the bubbles.  There must be bubbles, lots of them, and water (pretty hot water)  as far up to the top of the tub as we’ll let him have it – so he can go underwater completely, take mouthfuls of soapy water and spit them in perfect whale-spouts into the air, and cavort about, making waves, always requiring a towel or two on the floor.

He loves the colorful Spongebob Squarepants container the bubbles come in, but they’re expensive so my mom secretly refills the bottle with something else every time he empties the whole damn thing into the tub, pouring water from the bottle to the cap and from the cap onto his head and then requesting various cups and containers into which he can continue the pouring extravanganza.

Sometimes he’ll stay in there for an hour, sometimes 5 minutes, and there’s no telling which it’ll be.  All done bath, he’ll declare, and then one of us has to hurry to grab up the towel while he runs into my mom’s room and jumps all over the bed, naked and dripping as we try to catch him.

Jump!  Jump!  ‘Errybody’ jump!  he sings and laughs, bouncing from one spot to the next like a jumping bean, until I catch him up in the towel and dry him as vigorously and quickly as possible before he can escape.  Once dressed he stomps Olympic-quick down the steps to ask grandma for ‘tune-fish samwich’ and black soda, which we usually let him have because he’s getting much better at going pee and poopy on the potty.

He did have an incident/attack where he lightning-fast shot out at his grandma, but Andy and I got to him before he did her any harm and then held him down on the living room floor until he calmed down again and we could go.

When we got back home on Saturday I gave Andy a much-needed break by playing endless silly games with Jonah in the heated basement – catch the beanbag (what color is it?), roll the pretend shopping cart, put the slinky down the stairs, stack the blocks (what color are they?) chase each other around – up and down the stairs – around the craft table – that kind of thing. 

It was fun and I snatched him up and hugged him tight, my sweet little boo.  Yesterday I didn’t go over; I felt stuffy and sickly.  When I called Andy he told me that Jonah had taken his radiator cover off and threw it into the hallway at 4am, which scared the bejeezus out of Andy, but I guess there was no fight or agression afterwards; Jonah just felt like kicking up the nighttime scene a notch, I guess. 

We’ll see how he does this week.  Another psychiatrist appointment on Wednesday for some further med adjustment, maybe, and I’m supposed to be hearing from Springbrook soon, once they get Jonah’s paperwork. 

I sure hope they have bathtubs.

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Doctor: Ray, do you want to stay and live with your brother Charlie?

Raymond: Yeah.

Doctor: Or do you want to go back to Walbrook?

Raymond: Yeah.

Doctor: Which is it? Go back to Walbrook or stay with Charlie Babbitt?

Raymond: Go back to Walbrook, stay with Charlie Babbitt.  Stay with Charlie Babbitt, go back to Walbrook.

~ Rainman, 1988

– – –

“Jonah, do you want a donut?”  I ask him this morning on the way to the train.

“Donut?”  he repeats.  “Okay, boo, mama’ll get you a donut,” I tell him.

I come out of Stewart’s with a donut and hand it to him.  Before he’s even taken the first bite, he’s on to the next request.  “Grandma?”

“Grandma’s closed,” I answer.  I know my mom’s working today so that means she won’t be open for business until at least 3:30 this afternoon.  We continue on to the train tracks just as a train is going by, so it’s an instant-gratification experience for Jonah.

“Eddie?”  comes the next request.  Eddie is our office cat where I work, and sometimes I’ll take Jonah over on rainy days to feed Eddie a treat or throw a jingle-ball down the stairs to him a few dozen times.  The last place I want to be on a lovely weekend morning, however, is my workplace, so I shoot down this request as well.  “Eddie’s closed,” I say in what I hope passes for a mournful tone.  “Let’s go for a little car ride.”

“Window?”  he asks.  I give him the go-ahead and he rolls his window down all the way.  It’s kind of cold, being a mid-September morning — maybe 55 degrees.  But Jonah is impervious to cold in a way I neither share nor understand, so I turn on my heated seat and crank up the blower heat too.

My best friend Gina loved rolling her window all the way down, in any weather, and I find myself thinking of her…remembering our road trips, all the car’s vents directed toward me, blowing hot as she enjoyed the chilly wind.  She died 8 years ago but I can almost hear her laughing at me, riding around Voorheesville early Sunday morning to watch a train go by, for God’s sake…blasting heat and begrudgingly allowing Jonah to roll his window down.  I like the wind too, I imagine her whispering in his ear.

Then:  “This way?!”  Jonah half-requests and half-insists.  He has not pointed in any direction so I don’t know which way he wants to go.  I glance backward and ask him again.  “Straight?”  I guess.  Straight will take us along our normal loop up through Altamont and back to the train tracks in Voorheesville. “Straight,” he repeats (while pointing to the left).  But I’m not looking at him, so I drive forward, operating under the foolish assumption that Jonah knows what straight means.  “This way!”  he shouts, agitated now.  “This way!”

I pull the car over so I can see where he’s pointing, and then turn the car around to pass back over near the train tracks.

“Train?”  he asks.  “That way?!”

“You want to stay here and wait for another train?”  I ask.  I am very nearly ready to endure whatever tantrum is brewing rather than attempt to further unravel his fickle directional desires.  “Stay he-ah?”  Jonah echoes.  So we stay.

I lean back in my seat.

I close my eyes.

After a minute or two, from the backseat:  “That way?!”

I can’t help but laugh.  “Jonah,” I ask him, quoting Rainman, “do you want to stay with your brother Charlie or go back to Walbrook?”

“Stay he-ah,” he answers definitively.   Not five minutes later another train comes by, and Jonah is delighted.

Sometimes I think he’s got it all figured out and just likes to mess with my head.

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Most mornings, Jonah wakes up and loiters near his bedroom doorway, making little noises until Andy or I extend an invitation for him to come in our room.  We didn’t teach him this; it’s not like with the potty, where we dangle the ‘black soda carrot’ to elicit a desired behavior.  I have no idea what makes him wait at the threshold of his room when he clearly wants to jump in bed with us (and when this kind of self-regulation appears to be lacking entirely in every other instance of his life).  But wait he does.  This morning:

“Where’s my bunny?” I call out to him.  It’s 7:15am, kind of late for Jonah to be first waking and uttering his jabberwocky.  He comes running in and around to my side of the bed, where I pull back the sheet so he can get under the covers.  It’s awfully early but I’m an early bird by nature, and the truth is I love this time with Jonah, when I get to hug him close and kiss the top of his little almost-blonde head, when I get to squeeze him tight and sing “he’s the best little boy in the –”

–and hear Jonah’s little voice finishing the phrase: “– whole wide world!”

Today, though, I am particularly tired when he comes bounding in.  “Let’s go back to sleepy bye,” I whisper in a not-so-convincing excited voice.  For a while he cuddles but then gets restless and begins his daily litany of requests, repetitions, rituals…

Sighing, I mutter a phrase we say jokingly at work all the time: “Dear God and little baby Jesus help me.”

Reliably, Jonah repeats what he thinks he has heard.  “Help me, baby Jason!”

Laughing, I sit up.  “Wanna go see train?” I ask, figuring he’s going to ask me anyway so I’ll beat him to the punch.

Moneycoin?” he asks.  So it’s going to be a moneycoin kind of day. I get him a Tupperware container with maybe an inch or two of moneycoin inside; he is delighted.  “Moneycoin!” he shouts in gleeful agreement.  Then:  “train?” he asks.  “Yes, boo, we can go see the train too,” I generously concede.

On the way, we turn Guster up loud – and Jonah’s Tupperware container of moneycoin is a fine percussion instrument.  “So go… on!  If it’ll make you happier!” he sing-shouts, shaking his moneycoin around to the beat.  During the next song, a quieter tune, he gently swishes the moneycoin inside the container with his hand. Never let it be said my boy can’t break it down.

We even see two trainssomething spectacularly fortuitous. Later, we go with Grandma Jane to the park and Jonah brings his moneycoin along; for a while he just sits on a picnic bench and lets it run through his fingers in a miserly fashion.


Then he carries it to the top of the slide and dumps it down, a great rain of moneycoin falling into a shiny scattered pile at the bottom. A couple of two-or-three-year-old kids try to talk to Jonah at one point.

“Hi!” the little girl says brightly.  I prompt Jonah, who is so engrossed in the world of moneycoin, he probably doesn’t even hear the kid.

“Say hi, boo,” I tell him.

“Hi,” he says without looking up.  The precocious girl is indignant. “I”m over here,” she insists.

“He’s not much of a talker,” I explain.  My mother-in-law has already told the parents that Jonah has autism.  The little kids quickly lose interest and run off, laughing at some shared tidbit.  They’re awfully cute, those kids.

My boy, on the other hand, is completely grimy, dirt coating his hands, his grubby clothes, most of his face, and of course, his bare feet.  Jonah hears a train horn and goes tearing off toward the car.  We spring into action and actually catch the damn thing at the tracks.  Sweet.

After the park and the bonus-train, we visit Grandma Jane and Grandpa Jim’s house, where Jonah dumps the remaining moneycoin, this time in their driveway.

We got home a little while ago.  Now he’s in the bath, washing off round one of what will likely be two or three rounds-worth of dirt he’ll acquire today.

Dear God and little baby Jason help us.

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Every weekend morning, the first thing out of Jonah’s mouth is wan go see train?

Of course I want to go see the train, bunny. I am waiting with bated breath to see the train.

Thus begins our day, nearly always around 7:30am…bathing,  dressing, driving to Stewart’s or Dunkin’ Donuts for a coffee & usually something to eat (the coffee’s for me but Jonah’d drink it if I let him), then heading to Voorheesville where we pull over by a  randomly-open cash-only diner next to the train tracks and sit to wait for the inevitable train (there isn’t a schedule but there are plenty of early trains on the weekends).

I’m usually still pretty sleepy, whereas Jonah springs out of bed with the energy of noontime.  By the time I get him buckled in his booster seat, he’ll have worked himself up to a fever pitch, sucking his thumb in eager anticipation, humming urgently, and carefully tracking our turns to ensure I do not deviate from the accustomed route.  It was a bitch when they closed Krumkill Road for a few weeks and we had to take an alternate path to go-see-train. 

That Way!  That Way! Jonah would shout, pointing to the ROAD CLOSED sign. 

Jonah, That Way is CLOSED! I’d answer, cursing the construction, putting a Guster CD in to distract him, trying not to cave in to complete exasperation with the weekend only a few hours old.

God help us if I need gas, for that requires deviation from the route as well.   I can almost hear the gears of anxiety cranking into motion in Jonah’s brain.  Wait! Will there not be donut?

On these days, as I head toward the gas station, his voice from the backseat calls out every three seconds or so, with increasing urgency:  donut?

donut?

donut?

donut?

“Yes, yes, bunny, okay, donut.  Donut is open for business!  Train is open for business! Five minutes.”

Five mitt-ens, he confirms, deep suspicion in his voice.  Sometimes there is a breakdown at this point: me pumping gas and muttering to myself (why didn’t I do this yesterday?) – Jonah screeching, twisting in his car seat, trying to kick the window.  If the breakdown is bad, I’ll take him home for quiet time – but this is rare, as he is careful, even in his most anxious moments, not to compromise a chance at witnessing that glorious, graffiti-painted cargo train whiz by.

Some days when we arrive at the pull off area by the tracks, we see other train people.  Because Jonah has adored trains for two years or so now, I’ve learned a thing or two about these colorful characters.   They’re called railfanners, and they seek out the train-watching experience with an enthusiasm remarkably akin to Jonah’s.

a railfanner!

These railfanners, some with out-of-state plates, pull over and set up tripods to capture it all on video – from the moment the train enters sight around the bend to the time it disappears in a shrinking pinpoint down the straight track at the other end.   I want to ask the railfanners from Vermont and Massachusetts if they have trains in their own states, and if so, why they drive all this way to see ours.  Is Voorheesville a famous hotspot among railfanner elite?

We see one teenage boy a lot who rides over on his bike; he is outfitted with a neon green volunteer safety patrol vest, cell phone, and walkie-talkie.

he knows a lot about trains!

I ask him when the next train is coming, and he answers there’s a train leaving the Selkirk station in five minutes and another should be coming from the other direction in three minutes. I wonder if he has Asperger’s.  He knows so ridiculously much about the trains – where they’ve come from, where they’re going, which ones are owned by what companies, why some trains have three engines, what the trains are carrying – and more – that my mind is blown.

Armed with this new information concerning the arrival of the next train, Jonah waits in eager anticipation, cupping his hand behind his ear as I roll down all the windows.  He almost always offers running commentary.  Hear it?  Comin?  I hear it!  Hear it?  Train com-in?  Hear it?  I hear it!  Comin?

By the time the clang of the railroad crossing begins and the lights flash with the lowering of the gate, Jonah is beside himself with excitement.  Sometimes he’s cool about it, betraying his eagerness only by sucking his thumb with vigor and widening his eyes, and other times he shouts yaaaaaaaaay! and bounces in the seat, grunting and humming expectantly.  The train horn is always very loud, and Jonah covers his ears for that part, keen to catch the visual of the cars blurring as they pass, tilting his head to watch glinting sun reflections off shiny surfaces.  Then he sucks his thumb again, rocking in time to the rhythmic lurchings and mechanical tempos of the amazing, oft-sought-after train.

the train is loud!

Sometimes we’re lucky; I’ll drive around a bit after the train comes, and on the way back we’ll have perfect timing to see another one.   When we arrive home on those extra special days, he’ll declare to his dad, in rare full sentence style,  We saw two trains!

For Jonah, life doesn’t get much better than that.

For maybe five mitt-ens.

Then it’s on to the next thing on his favorites list.  He scrolls through verbally until we capitulate on something.

Grandma?  Swim-pool?  Number one park? Bath?  Black soda?

And sometimes, even, again:

Wan go see train?

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