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Because you love them perfectly.

Because someday, they will know it.

Because today is good, and pure, and lovely.

Because today, you are together.

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I come from a matriarchal family.  We are strong women.  Fierce women.  Often, we are  loud women.    We are benevolent rulers of our familial kingdom.  Tight hugs.  Loud laughs.  The men of my family are typically quiet (with the exception of my Uncle Burl, who loves to tell a good story, long, loud, and full of dramatic pauses and grand gestures).  But mostly introverted.  Soft spoken.  Perhaps one begats the other?  Maybe the men, outnumbered, learned long ago that they would have to fight too hard to be heard, so they save their breath?  Perhaps.  This image of my Uncle Vaun was taken just weeks before he began chemotherapy over the summer and lost all of his hair.  I haven’t seen him in some months, so he continues to look just like this in my mind.  With his poet’s heart and soft, gentle voice.  Once, after a loud and boisterous gathering with my extended family in western Colorado, Chris said to me, “Wow.  Everyone really loves your Uncle Vaun, don’t they?”  I thought about it for a second.  “Yeah, I guess they do.”  I had never really thought about it before.  Never really considered the dynamics of my sprawling family in regards to my quiet uncle.  But he was right.  There is a fierce and tender devotion to Vaun which is universally held.  A family hero worship of sorts.  He has never been the jolly, playful uncle who gave piggy back rides and pulled nickels from behind ears, nothing like that.  He is a veteran.  Quiet.  An artist whose work is strange and a little scary… bright technicolor squarish forms with three eyes. Six armed angular men in front of geometric shapes and vast outer space.  He is a musician.  Playing the vibraphone in his garage.  Tall and lean.  Bent over the bars with two mallets in each hand.  Transported into another world when he plays.  Coaxing unearthly sounds we have never heard before from the long, metal keys.  When I was a little girl, I spent a great deal of time at his house with my cousins.  He and my aunt got me to and from symphony rehearsals when my mother worked.  Picked me up from school when my cousin and I would miss the bus.  I logged in many hours sitting in the back cargo hold of their light blue bronco, playing games with my cousins.  Looking for Volkswagen bugs, slugging each other on the arm and keeping meticulous track of who had seen and claimed the most.  They would go out to eat once a year.  It was a special occasion.  Every year they would go out to breakfast on New Years Day, and every year, I was invited to join them.  Upon my high school graduation, then my college graduation, then landing a job teaching music and art, then the birth of my children…  each milestone event in my life, he would always make a special effort to tell me he was proud of me.  Sincerely and succinctly, in his soft and gentle voice.    “I’m proud of you, Sweetheart.”  Nothing florid and lavish, nothing over the top.  Simple.  Quiet.  Real.  After a few years of raising a child with autism, an out of the blue short phone call.  “You’re doing such a great job.  I’m proud of you, Sweetheart.”  That’s all.  Five minutes at the most.  There was no need for more.  He has never been a man of many words, but the words he uses are the right ones.  He never has trouble telling you that you are important.  That you are loved.  This photo is precious to me.  It tells so much about him.  He has no shields, he does not pretend.  He is unguarded, unsheltered.  He does not hide.  This is the way he loves us all, too.  Without reservations.  Simply.  Quietly.  Chris was right.  We do love him.  We are fierce, and we are tender, and we love him down in the hollows of our bones.  If you called any one of my far flung cousins on the phone today and asked them how they felt about their Uncle Vaun, they would weep.  We’re weepers, my tribe of loud laughing women.  And we love him.  Sweet God in heaven.  We love him.

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“If you eat your whole dinner, I’ll give you twenty dollars.” Daddy thought this was a perfectly safe thing to say to you.  You never eat your dinner, and never ever your whole dinner, and never, ever, ever your whole dinner in a restaurant.  But you did.  Last night, you did.  When Daddy handed you a $20 bill across the table, you reached your little arm over the empty chips and salsa bowls to grab it. “Can I get a My Little Pony now?” you asked, with excitement in your voice and hope in your eyes.  Four months ago you wanted one in Target.  You must have really wanted it badly, because you still remembered.  So of course, the next day after school… I drove you to Target and let you pick out your cuddly My Little Pony.  I don’t know if I’ve ever seen you so excited and happy.  When Lucas told you he liked your pony, you hugged him and told him you would never be mean to him again.  After we got home, this was the only time Songbird Serenade left your arms. (Yes.  That’s your pony’s name.  No.  I did not make that up.) When you put her down on the floor so you could take pictures of her.  You’re very proud of your pony.  And I’m very proud to be your mommy.

“I can’t resist a man in uniform!” My Grandmother would say, with a twinkle in her eye and a playful shrug of her shoulder.  She meant my grandfather.  The sailor who picked up the handbag she dropped on a busy San Fransisco street.  The man who came home to her.  The one who was her everything.  I have to agree… There is something irresistible about a man in uniform.  But the uniform I love is tiny, and there’s a very small man wearing it.  I get weak in the knees when you wear your Cub Scout uniform.  Your hat that pushes your little ears out just a bit.  The way your shirt tail never will stay tucked in. It does something to me.  Makes me want to gather you into my arms and feel your soft cheek against mine.  You’re getting dressed for your first den meeting of the year, and your buttons are all buttoned in the wrong button holes.  I think you fished dirty socks out of the hamper to wear.  You can’t quite get your neckerchief on right.  I can’t resist a man in uniform either.

“Mama, I want to be one.” He said, his short arms clasped around my neck. “Really? Why?” I was surprised. That isn’t something you often hear from the youngest in a big family, they always want to be as big as their siblings. He usually does a pretty good job of keeping up with his brothers. “I want to be one. So I can be a baby. So we can be together always. So I can do it all over again.” Going to school this year has been great, but it’s been hard on both of us too. Every day when he comes home from school we go up to his bedroom, crawl under the covers, and snuggle in his little twin bed. We sing songs, and talk about his day. For a few minutes it’s just the two of us. While his brothers are raiding the snacks, playing, running wild. He and I are closeted together, just like we used to be.