You're bright enough to figure it out. |
“Orange… Salute!” There she sways in her leotard, lost in a mob of tumblers, chanting on naked toes. “Form the orange, form, form the orange…” My daughter the seven-year-old, the second-grader, who still doesn’t know how to swim or ride a bike. Not from negligence I hope you know, but know you don’t believe. “Peel the orange, peel, peel the orange…” It is simply her nature to be cautious, to worry the concern for her own safety smooth like a stone. I have tried to instill a fearlessness in her I never felt myself. It is my duty as a father, as the first man she ever loved, to be braver than I am. But then I remember the time she stepped too deep at the city pool, her cheeks filled with air like balloons ready to pop. She needed to breathe as she looked up at me with closed eyes, pleading with her tiny hands for her daddy to save her. “Peel the orange, peel, peel the orange…” She hovers, waiting; not forming, not peeling, my hazel eyes crouched in her sockets, fingers twiddling, feet primed to spring. She is not as nimble as the others, neither statuesque nor graceful as God deemed in His perfect wisdom to deny her. They dance in time while she stands still. “Squeeze the orange, squeeze, squeeze the orange!” She rushes her favorite teacher, a young woman of seventeen, and squeezes her with all her might as the rest of the little girls run to catch up with her. She knew what she was doing all along. Now she is first in the center of a warm, safe little world; not as pretty, or fast, or gifted as some of them… But more beautiful than them all. |