I  wrote about  Hayley six years ago. She was about three. They'd  had a pre-view of a new child care centre.
A  couple of hours after, having given the matter much thought, she informed her mother she would  play with only one  at the new place. The Chocolate Girl. And that she did.   Their friendship lasted until they went separate ways once more.
Around  the same time, there was a memorable event in my backyard. Hayley and her cousin Ryan  of the same age, had bobbed like corks in the pool for a couple of summers  wearing life-jackets. They graduated to leaping off the steps in unison into the shallow end , first with lifejackets, then without.
They were the youngest. Older cousins were  jumping off the diving board into the deep end. Whatever  else she was doing, Hayley watched .
Then came the fateful Saturday night. The two sisters  were swimming  after dark with a spotlight behind.  That's when she decided.
She hugged her arms, bent at the elbows, close to her side, hands up, fists  clenched.  She  moved  towards the diving board with a sound in her throat  that was half giggle and half whimper. She climbed up  and inched her way forward, toes  bent as if trying to grip the surface.
As  she got close to  the end we called "You don't have to do this Hayley Girl".
By then she had blanked us out. We  knew she had to do it.  Momentarily. she stood shivering... a slight , skinny, pale, slip of a girl. Then she went. She jumped as high and as far as she could into the darkness and  a  small thin  disembodied voice came back to us with the legendary battle cry of the warrior.
               
                                               GERONIMO !!!!!  she shouted.
I  often wondered what stamps a memory into  a child's mind. Of all their  new and different  experiences, why does one scene etch itself in every tiny detail  forever.
I  wished I  knew the secret so that I could create an inventory for each child of mine. It seemed to me a store of good memories would be an enviable  resource...worth more than money.
I wasn't worried that  Hayley  was in the council chamber on May 12th. It was her night of  triumph.  She was to receive the plaqued  poster she drew. Not least of the satisfaction  would be that  her sister Megan  did  the same thing several years before.
She had a ringside seat for the  St.Kitts display.  She knew she  needn't  worry about her Grannie. I knew she was soaking up another moment of glory.
Would  anything   shadow her memory of  the event ?
I think not. Not  our Hayley.
I know grown women AND men  who don't have her integrity and fortitude.
Wednesday, 10 June 2009
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1 comment:
That was beautiful Evelyn!
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