The boy is dancing, his moves more jerky than
funky. I call him The Dancer, partly because of his disco-kung fu
motions, partly because I don't speak Chinese. I'm volunteering for two
weeks at a special needs school in Xi'an, China, and I can't pronounce
his name (or anyone's name), nor can I decipher the teachers' baffling
flurry of Chinese Chinese Chinese. I communicate through gestures and a
persistent if puzzled smile, but the Dancer doesn't seem to mind. He
stares at me, our eyes locked, then takes my hands. We swing them side
to side.
The classroom buzzes with squeaks and sobs; a tinny children's song chirps from a stereo. A teacher escorts him to a chair.
"Baa-baaa...," he says.
He says this often. I don't know what it means. My first day at the school, he pointed at me, his face sad.
"Baa-baaa..."
The
Dancer, like many of the children here, is autistic. Others in our
third-grade class have more severe developmental disabilities, and with
each day I feel more helpless than helpful. I wonder if coming here was a
mistake. I've wondered this everywhere I volunteered. I started in New
Orleans, helping rebuild homes nine months after Hurricane Katrina. A
few months later, my wife Julie and I taught English at an elementary
school in Costa Rica. After China, I'll assist scientists studying a
remote Ecuadoran cloud forest and work in a Palestinian refugee camp
near Bethlehem. Then, assuming she hasn't left me, Julie will join me in
Kenya to work at a children's home.
I'm
here because I'm trying to live a life that matters. Because my father,
the best man I've ever known, died suddenly, a heart attack stealing
his life. I'm here because it seems I'll never be a father myself. And
so I find myself asking questions.
How can I tackle my grief? What am I supposed to be?
My
father traveled to China almost 25 years earlier on business: a road
trip from Hong Kong to Guangdong. It was his only trip to China, and
driving through the green countryside, seeing China's poverty and
immense potential -- it was the most memorable trip of his life. I was
39 when he collapsed. He finished 18 holes of golf and then...he was
gone. Gone in the time it takes to clutch your chest. The time it takes
to hit the earth.
His grieving friends sent letters, each with the same theme.
Your father changed my life.
He
grew up poor. Never went to college. But he was ambitious and smart,
and he reached upper management with a series of medical electronics
firms while never forgetting his impoverished roots. In his own quiet
way, he helped those around him. "Remember, Budo," he once told me,
using my old family nickname, "you succeed when others succeed."
A
man at the school reminds me of Dad. The same thinning hair, the same
slight belly. I assume he's a grandfather. He's with a child I dub the
Buddha Boy. The Buddha Boy is 5 years old, maybe 6. He smiles as if
incapable of sadness, a smile that could sell cereal or toys on
television.
The boy has cerebral palsy. He raises his hands above his head,Castelli Cycling
and
the grandfather grips them, guiding the boy, his frail legs wobbling,
noodlelike, with each step. If the man let go, the boy would fall. But
of course he does not let go.
I
will never see one without the other. I can't fathom one without the
other. They don't seem to talk -- maybe the boy can't talk -- though
sometimes the grandfather, while holding the boy's raised hands, will
lean down and whisper in his ear. I wonder what he tells him. I wonder
what secrets they share.
Every
afternoon, when the kids return from naps, I wash their faces and hands
and help them brush their teeth. One by one we leave class and walk to a
sink -- they each carry a plastic bowl with washcloth and toothbrush
and toothpaste -- and inevitably I get soaked. The kids frequently run
the water full blast, despite my efforts to stop them. The wetter I am, I
soon discover, the more convinced the teachers are that I've done a
good job.
When
it's the Dancer's turn, he carries his bowl with a bland disregard,
until he spies himself in the mirror. Suddenly he's jumping and
squealing, arms flailing.
"Hey
-- jeez -- let's settle down," I say, though my English has no effect.
He acts chimp-like: hands over his head, face close to the mirror.
Somehow he finishes brushing, then blasts the water into his cup. And he
does it again -- splash -- and again.
I
take control, affectionately forceful, wrapping an arm around him,
pressing him against me, washing his hands and face with my free hand.
He's a sweet kid, though I've been collecting wounds from the
unpredictability of the children's conditions; bite marks and scratches,
a growing assembly of scabs. And yet I've grown fond of the students,Specialized Cycling
and the kind teachers who are caregivers, wrestlers, therapists.
I push up the sleeves of the Dancer's jacket and scrub his arms.
"See?" I tell him. "That wasn't so bad."
"Baa-baaaa," he says back in the class.
That
weekend I walk with some other volunteers along Xi'an's ancient city
wall. One of the volunteers speaks some Chinese and asks about the
school. I tell her about the Dancer, how his parents are divorced, how
he gravitates toward men.
"Hey, you speak Chinese," I say. "He says baa-baaa a lot. Any idea what that means?"
Bàba, she says, means father.
I don't look at the Dancer the same way after that.Garmin Cycling
I'd
always felt some connection with him -- the way he stares with those
sad, penetrating eyes -- but I see now we are kindred spirits. The boy
who longs for his father. The man who longed to be a dad.
I'd
like to find his father. I'd like to hurt his father. This isn't like
me, but I feel anger. Outrage that some self-centered jerk would abandon
this sweet,RadioShack Cycling
sensitive kid. I've heard multiple stories of fathers who left their families after learning a child was not "normal."
And then I think... who am I to judge? In four more days, I'll be another man who has entered his life and left him behind.
The
grandfather carries Buddha Boy on his back up the stairs. He takes him
to class, where the kids practice a Special Olympics game. Squares are
drawn on the classroom floor, and students jump from square to square.
The Buddha Boy raises his arms, and the grandfather holds his hands,
lifting him into each square. The teachers cheer.
I don't see the grandfather every day. When I do,authentic Moncler Jackets
it's
for seconds at a time. And yet I admire him. I admire his devotion. I
envy it. I envy his dedication and commitment; his determined,
unyielding love.